Pocket Screw
Sam & Mike
Without
a doubt, pocket screws shine when it comes to cabinetry! These screws can be
used when working with face frames. There’s nothing easier for the task, and it
saves a great deal of time. Pocket screws excel for joinery of solid wood face
frames, but also to attach solid wood reinforcing edging for plywood shelves
and the plywood boxes as well. Pocket screws also work very well for attaching
table tops, flat mitred items like picture frames, legs on occasional tables,
and repairing broken pieces of furniture. Many folks use them as an exclusive
joinery system for all types of projects.
Pocket-hole
joinery, or pocket-screw
joinery, involves drilling a hole at an angle — usually 15 degrees — into
one workpiece, and then joining it to a second workpiece with a self-tapping screw. The technique, in addition to doweling, has its roots in ancient Egypt. Egyptians clamped two workpieces together and
bored a hole at an angle from the outside workpiece into the second workpiece.
They then inserted a dowel with glue, and cut it off flush with the outermost
surface.
Because the screws act as internal clamps holding
the joint together, glue is unnecessary (but usually recommended) for most
common joints. If glue is used, clamping is not required because of the ‘internal
clamps’ holding the joint together while the glue dries.
Requires only one hole to be drilled, eliminating
the need to precisely line up mating workpieces, as is required with dowel
and mortise and tenon joints.
Does not require any complex mathematics or
measurements, such as those used in mortise and tenon joints.
Because pocket-hole joinery doesn't require access to the inside of the joint, quick repairs are possible without completely disassembling the joint. Fixing a squeaky chair or strengthening furniture requires only the drilling of additional pocket holes, and the use of screws to pull the two pieces together. In the countryside hills of Ukrainia these are called holey moleys (not for real).
Because pocket-hole joinery doesn't require access to the inside of the joint, quick repairs are possible without completely disassembling the joint. Fixing a squeaky chair or strengthening furniture requires only the drilling of additional pocket holes, and the use of screws to pull the two pieces together. In the countryside hills of Ukrainia these are called holey moleys (not for real).
Pocket holes are created
with a drill and jig.
Pocket holes are not good
for racking or shearing.
Butt joinery. Mechanical
fastener.
Pocket Hole Jig
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