Mine is probably somewhere between the two 38mm to 60mm dowels. Not sure if that makes much difference.sunnybob":3qluvrpz said:look at the distance between the corners of the square to the outside of the round on the sketch, then on the picture posted.
The sketch shows at least twice as much wood than the pic.
sunnybob":30na9opb said:The weakness of the joint is in the distance between the corner and the diameter. Ignore the thickness of the square, imagine how much (or how little) force it would need to split that amount of wood, using a twisting lever as long as the cross bar youre fitting.
If this is a vice handle, then the first time you need to lean on it that amount of wood will give way. If this were made of metal, then it would be impossible to break, but made of wood.....
I see what you mean there. But...if you think of the joint without any glue in it, the failure is immediate on the round tenon version as it would just slip around.phil.p":2a1fr91y said:Except you would not have four weak spots with a round tenon. Any stress/weakness would be on the the circumference (the whole glued area) and not the four corners outwards.
I was just surprised by the initial comment/observation that's all, and genuinely interested in why. That's why I asked the same question on Lumberjocks (and got the opposite answer)sunnybob":30kyb8sb said:I think we've spent enough time trying to convince you.
its your work, do what you will.
We wont say "we told you so"
honest.
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