Plate Joiners for a Perfect
Fit The ease of
joining--when you have the right tool by Andrew
Wormer
How Does It Work?
The Mechanics
Biscuit Fits
Questions Before You
Buy
The Cost of Joining
Once found almost exclusively in cabinet shops, plate joiners
(sometimes called biscuit joiners) have become increasingly common in
home workshops and on construction sites, and for good reason: they make the
process of joining two boards together fast, simple, and safe.
Useful for making butt joints, miter joints, and edge-to-edge joints, plate
joinery can be used with just about any type of wood, as well as with materials
ranging from particle board to solid-surface countertops. With a plate joiner,
you can quickly make bookshelves and cabinets, reinforce many of the joints made
by trim carpenters, or invent entirely new applications. How Does It
Work? Plate joiners are relatively small, barrel-shaped tools that
take up less room in the toolbox than a circular saw. They are designed to do
only one thing: cut crescent-shaped slots of various sizes. But plate joinery is
actually a two-part process. Once you've made slots in the two pieces to be
joined, the second step is to put glue in the slots and insert biscuits into the
mated pieces.
Biscuits are wafers made of compressed beech chips stamped into a
football shape, sized slightly smaller than the slots that the joiner cuts. This
leaves a little bit of play so that joints can be more easily aligned (try that
with a doweled or mortise-and-tenon joint!) and provides room for the glue. Once
the glue comes in contact with the biscuits, they absorb moisture and begin to
swell. This is what makes biscuit joints so tight and strong.
The
Mechanics Plate joiners use a 4-inch-diameter carbide-tipped
circular saw blade that usually has six teeth (though some blades have 10 or
more). The blade is mounted so that most of the time it's safely out of harm's
way behind the joiner's spring-loaded faceplate. When you press the faceplate
against a workpiece, the blade extends through a slot in the faceplate, cutting
a kerf (notch) of predetermined depth into the wood. The fence
helps guide the position of the kerf, while the depth of the cut is controlled
by a quick-set stop mechanism.
Biscuit
Fits All plate joiners have at least three preset cutting depths
that correspond with the three basic biscuit sizes. In addition, some joiners
have presets for various specialty biscuits, knockdown fittings, and hinges. And
some plate joiners come with (or can be fitted with) a small, 2-inch-diameter
blade for cutting the small slots needed by the new breeds of smaller biscuits.
The three basic biscuit sizes are:
#0: About 5/8 of an inch wide by 1 3/4 inches long (47 x 15 mm)
#10: About 3/4 of an inch wide by 2 1/8 inches long (53 x 19 mm)
#20: 1 inch wide by 2 1/2 inches long (56 x 23 mm)
There are also smaller face frame or mini biscuits that are designed
for use with materials as narrow as 1 1/2 inches, such as cabinet face frames.
Questions
Before You Buy How well your plate joiner will work for you
depends on a few factors:
- How much power does the motor pack? Plate joiners typically range in
power from about 4.5 amps to 8 amps. Higher amperage is particularly important
if you do a lot of cutting in hard woods.
Bushings or bearings?
Both durability and accuracy are affected by whether the joiner uses bushings
(which can result in more end-play in the spindle) or bearings (which are
preferable). What kind of fence system does it use? Probably more
important than sheer power is a joiner's fence system. The best fences are
accurate and easily adjustable, allowing the user to make different kinds of
cuts without going through a long setup procedure. Fences that have fixed stops
at 45 and 90 degrees are less versatile than those that can be adjusted to any
angle within that range. On some joiners, the fence has to be removed to make a
flush cut. Some require a special tool to change the fence's position on the
faceplate; other joiners are equipped with a knob for easy fence adjustments.
Are the handles adjustable? Ergonomics counts with plate joiners,
too. Look for adjustable handles, which make it easier to change gripping
positions. What about sawdust? Plate joiners generate a considerable
amount of sawdust. To avoid this health hazard, you'll want some sort of dust
collection capability. Many joiners come equipped with a dust collection bag or
have a port that can be connected to a vacuum system. Any storage
advice? If possible, choose a joiner that comes with a case so that you can
keep the tool, its accessories, and the different biscuits you'll need all in
one place.
The Cost of
Joining Plate joiners range in price from less than $150 to almost
$1,000 for a top-of-the-line "showpiece" tool. A cabinet shop that uses the tool
day in and day out might require the precision and durability of a
premium-priced machine. The good news is that most carpenters and
do-it-yourselfers will be happy with the wide selection of lower-cost plate
joiners that have plenty of features and are a good value.
Andrew Wormer is a contributing editor to Fine
Homebuilding magazine and the author of The
Builder's Book of Bathrooms and The
Bathroom Idea Book.
Article courtesy of Amazon.com.
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