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For example, what is a scarf joint, or a volute?
A scarf joint may also be used to fix problems caused when a board is cut too short for the application.
The scarf joint is used when the material being joined is not available in the length required.
We made scarf joints at the ends-do you know what a scarf is?
The board can be cut in half with a tapered cut yielding a scarf joint.
A 'scarf joint' is a way of gluing headstocks on to necks.
In traditional timber framing there are many types of scarf joints used to join timbers.
It is an alternative to other joints such as the butt joint and the scarf joint.
Scarf joints join two pieces end-to-end, and are typically cut in 45-degree angles to provide an overlap.
He noted that to form the scarf joint the rail was halved in thickness at its ends, where the stress was greatest.
The headstock may be carved separately and glued to neck using some sort of joint (such as scarf joint).
"Now they're making scarf joints.
A scarf joint (also known as a scarph joint) is a method of joining two members end to end in woodworking or metalworking.
Where long timber was not available, or the ship was very long, the planks were butt joined although over lapping scarf joints, fixed with nails.
Splice joints are stronger than unreinforced butt joints and have the potential to be stronger than a scarf joint.
The Infinity's neck is made from oil-finished rock maple, with the trademarked pointy headstock grafted on via a scarf joint behind the first fret.
Norse shipwrights would attach both the stem and stern to the keel with scarfed joints, with the hull itself being clinker-built.
Look at a cheap modern electric and you'll see a glue-line running diagonally through the neck somewhere behind the second and third frets - that's a scarf joint.
Bridle joints are commonly used to join rafter tops, also used in scarf joints and sometimes sill corner joints in timber framing.
The device was invented by William Bridges Adams in May 1842, because of his dissatisfaction with the scarf joints and other systems of joining rails then in use.
The neck is maple and has been designed so that the infamous timber saving scarf joint under the third fret can be avoided in favour of an equally conservationally sound one-piece affair.
Where scarfed joints are used in the restoration of vintage aircraft most developed countries will only issue an airworthyness certificate if all such joints have used an angle no less than 1:8.
There are jigs to cut dovetails, mortise & tenon joints, box joints, keyed miters, finger joints, bridle joints, scarf joints, and many other joints.
The Deluxe model featured neck-through construction, the standard models featured a bolt-on one-piece neck (two-piece if you count the fretboard) with no scarf joint and with the contoured heel.
A diminutive scarf joint is in evidence in the scale model of a Dutch barn, the largest and most detailed of the models he has been building for the past three years, and the only one on display to come from outside Connecticut.