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An easy beginner’s guide to successful wood joinery with a biscuit joiner
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A biscuit joiner, also known as a plate joiner, is an electric woodworking tool. It joins two pieces of wood together without staples, nails, or screws. A biscuit joiner uses a small blade (4 inches or 101.6 millimeters) to cut a crescent shaped hole in the opposite edges of two pieces of wood. An oval wooden "biscuit" is covered with glue, placed in the slot, and the two boards are clamped together to form a joint. This simple process creates tight, smooth, and seamless joints. To get the results you want in woodworking, you need to know how to use a biscuit joiner.

    • Use as many biscuits as needed to secure the pieces of wood.
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    • The biscuit process allows some leeway in aligning the pieces of wood, so perfect alignment is unnecessary.
    • Apply pressure to release the blade, allowing it to cut the wood.
    • The joiner's cutting blade will retract while it is idle.
    • The crescent shaped slots may be longer and larger the joiner biscuit; this allows a user to better align the joined pieces just before the glued joiner biscuit starts to set.
    • Upon being clamped, the compressed biscuit will expand to fill the crescent shaped slot and create a strong bond between the two pieces as it dries.
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  • Question
    Does the blade have vertical movement for different wood thickness?
    Dean V
    Community Answer
    Yes. You will want to align/center the cutter to the thickness of the wood you are using. The adjustment is at the side of the fence. Check during your progress to make sure the setting hasn't changed.
  • Question
    How do you remove black mold stains in a washing machine?
    Community Answer
    Full-strength Clorox will easily take mold out. Pour directly onto the stain, then do a light wash to clear the drum (without any clothes in the machine).
  • Question
    I'm having a problem holding down the wood. I've tried clamps, but they just don't work. How can I better fix this situation?
    Guitarteacher91
    Community Answer
    This depends on lots of things if clamps don't work for whatever reason, you have to get aggressive and in whatever ways are necessary Like take two other boards for top and bottom, and use screws or bolts to tighten with wrenches exerting more force that clamps or it's holes don't matter. Screw the screws into the project.
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      Warnings

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      Things You'll Need

      • Wood glue
      • Wood clamps
      • Biscuits come in three sizes:
      1. 0 - 5/8 inch wide x 1-3/4 inches long (13 mm x 44.45 mm); #10 - 3/4 inch wide x 2-1/8 inches long (19.05 mm x 2 mm); #20–1 inch (50.8–2.5 cm) wide x 2-3/8 inches long (25.4 mm x 2.38 mm). Biscuits are .148 inches (3.76 mm) thick.

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