Forrest Anderson
Member
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2007
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- 1,072
The results posted by mr_hockey at the beginning of the thread were divided into two categories - Shear and Pull Apart. For ease of reference, the Pull Apart figures were:
M&T 2525
Dowel 1866
Domino 1486
Beadlock 1170
bisquit [sic] 766
My initial reaction was to assume that the the dowelled joint separated (pulled apart) at 1866, and the Dominoed joined separated at 1486, indicating that the dowelled joint could withstand 25% more pulling force than the Dominoed one, before the joint separated.
bassman00 kindly found a video at http://www.woodmagazine.com/wood/story.jhtml?storyid=/templatedata/wood/story/data/1178129509968.xml which accompanies the testing article. It shows how each jointing system works, and although it doesn't show the testing in progress, it does show the failed joints, which are presumably those which were subjected to Pull Apart testing.
I have taken the liberty of posting screenshots from three frames of that video, which show the failed joints. I have added labels to identify each joint:
Looking at how the joints have failed, it seems that only the biscuited joint has actually pulled apart. The Dominoed, Beadlocked and Dowelmaxed joints have remained intact, and the wood in the horizontal wooden member has split along its length, which stopped the test.
Since it was the wood which seems to have failed in three cases, rather than the joint, I don't believe that the strength figures in the test can be reliably used to compare the strength of the three jointing methods. Instead, they primarily reflect the strength of the horizontal member. I say primarily, because we don't know how deep the various loose tenons were set into the horizontal member. If the end of any of the tenons extended beyond the split in the wood, then the part of the tenon beyond the split has indeed lost its grip in the surounding wood and failed (or the tenon has fractured).
Forrest
M&T 2525
Dowel 1866
Domino 1486
Beadlock 1170
bisquit [sic] 766
My initial reaction was to assume that the the dowelled joint separated (pulled apart) at 1866, and the Dominoed joined separated at 1486, indicating that the dowelled joint could withstand 25% more pulling force than the Dominoed one, before the joint separated.
bassman00 kindly found a video at http://www.woodmagazine.com/wood/story.jhtml?storyid=/templatedata/wood/story/data/1178129509968.xml which accompanies the testing article. It shows how each jointing system works, and although it doesn't show the testing in progress, it does show the failed joints, which are presumably those which were subjected to Pull Apart testing.
I have taken the liberty of posting screenshots from three frames of that video, which show the failed joints. I have added labels to identify each joint:

Looking at how the joints have failed, it seems that only the biscuited joint has actually pulled apart. The Dominoed, Beadlocked and Dowelmaxed joints have remained intact, and the wood in the horizontal wooden member has split along its length, which stopped the test.
Since it was the wood which seems to have failed in three cases, rather than the joint, I don't believe that the strength figures in the test can be reliably used to compare the strength of the three jointing methods. Instead, they primarily reflect the strength of the horizontal member. I say primarily, because we don't know how deep the various loose tenons were set into the horizontal member. If the end of any of the tenons extended beyond the split in the wood, then the part of the tenon beyond the split has indeed lost its grip in the surounding wood and failed (or the tenon has fractured).
Forrest