Added Info FINE WOODWORKING #53 Jul-Aug 1985 pg. 4
Simple jig serves as a pre-measured rip fence for doing repetative rabbets and dados on a table saw. This reversible jig fits into the miter gauge slot.
FINE WOODWORKING #60 Sep-Oct 1986 pg. 8
Tips on preventing splintering when cutting crossgrain dadoes in plywood.
FINE WOODWORKING #60 Sep-Oct 1986 pg. 14
Tip: Use a mortising chisel mounted in a sharpening guide to clean out dadoes.
FINE WOODWORKING #63 Mar-Apr 1987 pg. 8
Tip to avoid chipping when sawing cross-grain dadoes in plywood.
FINE WOODWORKING #79 Nov-Dec 1989 pg. 22
How to avoid chipping the veneer when sawing cross-grain dadoes in plywood.
FINE WOODWORKING #82 May-Jun 1990 pg. 14
Tip on cutting a slightly-wider dado on a table saw by attaching a piece of paper to the fence (instead of moving the fence).
FINE WOODWORKING #113 Jul-Aug 1995 pg. 20
Get tight-fitting back panels in cabinets by replacing the traditional square rabbet with a beveled rabbet. The back panel is also beveled, resulting in a no-glueline joint on all four sides.
FINE WOODWORKING #114 Sep-Oct 1995 pg. 18
Rabbets and dadoes. Two basic joints made with a router and table saw. (1) Using the router to fabricate casework joints. (2) Using the table saw to fabricate drawer joints.
FINE WOODWORKING #126 Sep-Oct 1997 pg. 74
Making dadoes on a table saw using the standard blade and a dog board.
FINE WOODWORKING #127 Nov-Dec 1997 pg. 36
How to cut square grooves (dadoes or rabbets) without a router.
HANDY ANDY Jul 1978 (v.2#9) pg. 11
Easy wood joints and how to make them without power tools. Covers butt joints, miter joints, lap joints, rabbet joints, dados, and mortise-and-tenon joints.
HANDY ANDY Nov 1978 (v.3#2) pg. 69
Shop test of the System Zenses, a series of jigs and rotary cutters powered by an electric drill. Does dowelling, rabbets, dovetails and other cabinet joints.
MECHANIX ILLUSTRATED #524 Jan 1972 (v.68) pg. 101
Bench-saw know-how. Part 3. Sophisticated sawing tricks. Cutting coves, saucering round work pieces, working with molding-head cutters, edge-rabbeting round work/pieces.
POPULAR MECHANICS Sep 1972 (v.138#3) pg. 158
Twenty eight ways to make strong wood joints. Includes the following styles of joints: lap, tenon, dowel, butt, dovetail, glue-block, splined, rabbet, and cogged. Several versions of each may be illustrated.
POPULAR MECHANICS Aug 1974 (v.142#2) pg. 130
Chisel-routing jig. Adapt a chisel to do a router's job of making the finish passes on a hand-cut dado or groove.
POPULAR MECHANICS Aug 1977 (v.148#2) pg. 110
Handsaw jig serves as a depth stop, guide and gauge. Very useful for cutting dadoes by hand.
POPULAR MECHANICS Jul 1981 (v.156#1) pg. 87
Make a large and heavy marking gauge. It is suitable for both scoring and making rabbets and other cuts in softwood.
POPULAR MECHANICS Oct 1981 (v.156#4) pg. 35
How to master the art of fine joinery. Part 1. Butt joints, rabbets and dadoes.
POPULAR MECHANICS Nov 1981 (v.156#5) pg. 118
Tip: How to cut "splinterless" dadoes, especially on plywood.
POPULAR MECHANICS Feb 1984 (v.161#2) pg. 134
Rabbet and dado joints. Fast, simple and strong joints that you can make by power or hand. (1) Handcut dado joint. (2) Power-tool dadoes. (3) Rabbet joints. (4) Combination dado/rabbet joint.
POPULAR MECHANICS Feb 1995 (v.172#2) pg. 81
How to cut rabbet-miter joints. Step-by-step instructions for the simple, locked, and housed style joints.
POPULAR SCIENCE May 1967 (v.190#5) pg. 151
Table saw master jig. Auxiliary sliding table accepts various attachements and jigs for crosscutting, dadoing, mitering, and tenoning.
POPULAR WOODWORKING #76 Jan 1994 (v.13#4) pg. 70
Shooting rabbets, grooves and dadoes by hand using a rabbet plane or dado plane.
POPULAR WOODWORKING #83 Mar 1995 (v.14#5) pg. 6
Trenching, excavating and ploughing grooves and profiles in wood using hand tools. Looks at plough plane, old woman's tooth, hand router planes, molding router, etc.
POPULAR WOODWORKING #84 May 1995 (v.14#6) pg. 68
Rotary planer cuts rabbets and tenons.
SCIENCE & MECHANICS #215 Mar 1963 (v.34#3) pg. 111
Basics of dadoing and rabbeting.
SCIENCE & MECHANICS #217 May 1963 (v.34#5) pg. 88
Slip-on auxiliary fence for a table saw facilitates cutting a rabbet on the end of a work piece using a dado blade. This 7" tall auxiliary fence also helps support tall work pieces.
SHOPNOTES #3 May 1992 (v.1) pg. 4
Chisel techniques. Using the correct grip and a few simple techniques to make precise, controlled cuts with a chisel. Shows how to cut a mortise, tenon, hinge mortise, and groove.
SHOPNOTES #15 May 1994 (v.3) pg. 24
Tip on using a narrower dado blade, a spacer block and the table saw's rip fence to cut exact-width dadoes in plywood.
SHOPNOTES #18 Nov 1994 (v.3) pg. 29
Cutting rabbets on the table saw without a dado blade. Two methods described.
SHOPNOTES #20 Mar 1995 (v.4) pg. 24
Cutting perfectly aligned angled dadoes on a table saw. Includes a shop-made angle gauge.
SHOPNOTES #25 Jan 1996 (v.5) pg. 12
Locking rabbet joints. The technique for cutting lipped and flush joints. Includes three table saw accessories (tall auxiliary fence, zero-clearance base, support block).
SHOPNOTES #29 Sep 1996 (v.5) pg. 14
Custom fitting dado joints. A table saw or router method for cutting tight-fitting dado joints.
SHOPNOTES #45 May 1999 (v.8) pg. 10
How to cut compound angle dados on a table saw. Included in an article on building wooden sawhorse.
WOOD MAGAZINE #6 Aug 1985 (v.2#4) pg. 82
Table saw jig for making identical dado cuts in a series of pieces when the cut is wider that the dado blade.
WOOD MAGAZINE #36 Aug 1990 (v.7#4) pg. 23
Tip on using a rasp to slightly widen a dado.
WOOD MAGAZINE #38 Oct 1990 (v.7#6) pg. 24
Advice on how to deal with dadoing problems caused by variance in plywood thickness.
WOOD MAGAZINE #59 Feb 1993 (v.10#2) pg. 74
Tried-and-true joinery of yesteryear. Diagrams for making (1) fox wedge, (2) hammer-head joint, (3) strong-oblique halving joint, (4) double-dovetail halving joint, (5) tapered-and-stopped dovetail housing joint, and (6) halved-and-splayed scarf joint.
WOOD MAGAZINE #85 Jan 1996 (v.13#1) pg. 78
How to make a blind (or stopped) dado for a drawer guide frame.
WOOD MAGAZINE #98 Aug 1997 (v.14#5) pg. 108
Five ways to make precision rabbet cuts.
WOOD MAGAZINE #106 Jun 1998 (v.15#4) pg. 64
How to make lock-rabbet drawer joints with a table saw.
WOOD MAGAZINE #110 Dec 1998 (v.15#8) pg. 12
Technique for cutting tenon-dado corner joints on a radial arm saw.
WOOD MAGAZINE #132 Apr 2001 (v.18#3) pg. 31
How to cut the rabbet and groove joint (also called a milled dado box corner, or a combination dado rabbet). This is a strong locking joint suitable for joining a drawer front to the sides.
WOODSMITH #6 Nov 1979 pg. 8
Correction WOODSMITH #9 May 1980 pg. 2
How to cut the dado/rabbet joint. Commonly used to join a drawer back to the sides.
WOODSMITH #10 Jul 1980 pg. 9
How to cut and rabbet small pieces with a table saw.
WOODSMITH #15 May 1981 pg. 15
How to cut and rabbet small pieces with a radial arm saw.
WOODSMITH #15 May 1981 pg. 16
Tip: Draw several "stop lines" when cutting blind dado's with a router or table saw.
WOODSMITH #21 May 1982 pg. 3
Join plywood at the corners with a half rabbet joint plus a solid wood corner. It is much easier to cut than a miter joint and is not subject to splitting.
WOODSMITH #22 Jul 1982 pg. 3
How to cut dadoes on large panels with a table saw without having the panel tip.
WOODSMITH #35 Sep-Oct 1984 pg. 3
Joinery and molding tips. Cutting quarter-round stops. Stopped molding cuts. Routing rabbets. Compound miters.
WOODSMITH #36 Nov-Dec 1984 pg. 20
Tip: How to prevent tearout when cutting a rabbet across the grain on plywood.
WOODSMITH #49 Feb 1987 pg. 22
Tip on cutting dadoes or lap joint on work pieces that are the finished sized, not oversized.
WOODSMITH #57 Jun 1988 pg. 23
Cutting a locked rabbet joint on a table saw.
WOODSMITH #61 Feb 1989 pg. 19
Jig for cutting uniformly spaced dadoes (or kerfs) on a table saw.
WOODSMITH #69 Jun 1990 pg. 15
Table saw method for cutting a dado in the center of a work piece.
WOODSMITH #87 Jun 1993 (v.15) pg. 16
Make a sanding block to flatten the bottom of a dado, especially those that will be exposed.
WOODSMITH #91 Feb 1994 (v.16) pg. 17
How to cut rabbets on a jointer.
WOODSMITH #112 Aug 1997 (v.19) pg. 34
Cutting the locking rabbet joint using a table saw. A good alternative to dovetails when making drawers.
WOODSMITH #120 Dec 1998 (v.20) pg. 16
Auxiliary fence for a table saw facilitates cutting rabbet joints and doubles as a tall support fence. It fits over your existing rip fence.
WOODSMITH #123 Jun 1999 (v.21) pg. 26
Simple sliding jig which fits over the fence on a table saw is useful when making lap-joints, grooves, sliding dovetails, dadoes, and tenons.
WOODWORK #20 Mar-Apr 1993 pg. 18
An introduction to traditional (hand) furniture making. Part 2. Bookcase. Learn to make rabbets, dadoes and housed joints by hand.
WOODWORK #20 Mar-Apr 1993 pg. 58
How to work a curved rebate using hand tools. Reprinted from November 1944 issue.
WOODWORKER Nov 1994 (v.98#11) pg. 118
Tip: How to cut small dadoes with a drill bit.
WOODWORKER'S JOURNAL Sep-Oct 1977 (v.1#5) pg. 15
How to cut the plain rabbet-miter joint using a table saw.
WOODWORKER'S JOURNAL Jul-Aug 1981 (v.5#4) pg. 12
Tip: How to apply glue to a dado to minimize squeeze-out.
WOODWORKER'S JOURNAL Nov-Dec 1984 (v.8#6) pg. 64
Tip on how to measure the exact distance between a rip fence and the farthest tooth of a dado head.
WOODWORKER'S JOURNAL Mar-Apr 1990 (v.14#2) pg. 6
Tip: Clamp two saws together, separated with a wooden spacer, when cutting dadoes, notches, etc. by hand.
WORKBENCH Jan-Feb 1979 (v.35#1) pg. 9
How to correct the problem of a "too-wide" dado.
WORKBENCH May-Jun 1987 (v.43#3) pg. 14
Widen a dado using this simple fixture that consists of a flat file held by two strips of wood.
WORKBENCH May-Jun 1988 (v.44#3) pg. 10
Added Info WORKBENCH Jul-Aug 1988 (v.44#4) pg. 6
Special jigs for making wooden picture frames from wide moldings. (1) Compound-miter jig for a table saw. (2) Rabbeting jig for a table saw. (3) Clamping corners for use with a band clamp.
WORKBENCH Apr-May 1993 (v.49#2) pg. 74