I should probably post these on a wood-working forum, but if you're reading this one on this board, I'm certain you've got an opinion that can help me!
I'm planning on building Langstroth-style hive boxes, medium-sized (not sure I want deeps yet, but that detail is irrelevant for the questions), using 1x8 white-wood lumber from local home center (Birch if I can swing the $cake$):
Hoping to build a practice box or two today and my noodle started cooking over that 2nd cup this morning...
How wide do you make your finger joints? What plans I've looked at show about 3/4ths of an inch in most cases? 1x lumber is 0.75 dimensional, so... is it standard to make fingers = stock width? (never made a box/finger-joints before).
I have a wobbler-style Dado (and sled-style jig for making the cuts). I know, piece of junk, but 5-bucks off Craigslist is better than the $50 Home Depot wants for a stacked-setup (and my table is a Junky old Craftsman). Assuming I cut the fingers to a depth of 0.75" (or greater), should I cut in multiple passes (considering the setup, I'm thinking that's a lot of material to remove in 1-pass, even going slow?)
.. and if so, how best to ensure all boxes in the joint are universal? Make the final-depth pass on all-boards at the same time? Is it easy to get out-of-square, or does the jig tend to compensate for human-error?
.... What about wider-fingers? Say 1-inch, to 1.5 inches?
.... Do you cut slightly under-sized and hand-tune w/ sand-paper/chisel?
... SURE, it'd be nice to have a better saw and stacked dado, but I have fun working w/ the wee-one's in the shed.... I do have a nice router, and a guy @ work has the Porter-Cable Router jig thinggy.... come time to build the real-hive, I'll probably ask to borrow that thing for a weekend and make it perfectly tight, LOL, but I enjoy the learning, have picked up some experience, and it gets the kids outside and not exercising their thumbs in-front of the Tee-Vee!
I'll probably come up w/ more questions after the 3rd cup. LOL!
Thanks!
- K