Loading...
Skip to main content
Site identity, navigation, etc.
Log in
Username
Password
I forgot my password
CapsLock is on.
Log in
Stay in SSL mode
Navigation and related functionality and content
Related content
History: Glossary of Woodworking Hand Tools
View published page
Edit published page
Collapse Into Edit Sessions
Source of version: 186
«
»
{img type="fileId" fileId="13"} !Instructions __Welcome to our Glossary of Woodworking Hand Tools__. Feel free to edit and add "Hand Tools" to this research page. Please follow the general guidelines as outlined below. *Add only woodworking terminology that is widely used in the crafts, arts, trades and industry of woodworking. *Avoid entering terminology that is used locally, or regionally. *Please research your own entries, before entering them here, and verify that they are indeed accurate and reliable. !A --- __[https://thepatriotwoodwiki.org/Adze|Adze]__ - An adze is similar to an axe, imagine an axe with its blade at a right angle to its haft (helve or handle). See various types below *__[https://thepatriotwoodwiki.org/Adze#Carpenter_s|Adze, Carpenters]__ - This adze similar to the standard adze, yet has a square back of the blade, that can be used for striking other object as in a hammer or maul action. *__[https://thepatriotwoodwiki.org/Adze#Cooper_s|Adze, Coopers]__ - The coopers adze is held by one hand and has a curved blade, typically used by barrel makers, favored for its small and easy to use weight and size, and for the curved blade. *__[https://thepatriotwoodwiki.org/Adze#Sculptor|Adze, Sculptors]__ - The sculptors adze has a straighter blade quite the opposite of the coopers adze, it as well is used by one hand. *__[https://thepatriotwoodwiki.org/Adze#Ship_carpenter_s|Adze, Ship Carpenters]__ - This specialty adze has a blade similar to the shape of a garden hoe, and is fitted with a spur on the back of the blade, the spur is used to set large nails or to punch holes or indentations into the wood. {img type="fileId" fileId="70" thumb="box" desc="Adze vs. Axe " alt="adze vs. axe"} __((Axe|Axe))__ - See various types below: *__{MOUSEOVER(label="Broad" closeDelay="1")}{img type="fileId" fileId="276" thumb="box" width="400px" desc="Gransfor Bruk Broad Axe"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - The Broad Axe is suitable for squaring logs and planks, for example when building a log house. Broad Axes very greatly depending on the shape of the head and edge and the angle of the handle.{FOOTNOTE()}“Gränsfors Broad Axe, Model 1900.” Gränsfors Bruk, https://www.gransforsbruk.com/en/product/gransfors-broad-axe-model-1900/. Accessed 23 Dec. 2018. {FOOTNOTE} *__{MOUSEOVER(label="Carpenters" closeDelay="1")}{img type="fileId" fileId="281" thumb="box" width="400px" desc="Gransfor Bruk Carpenters Axe"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - Carpenter's Axe or Carpenter's Hatchet is a small axe, usually slightly larger than a hatchet, used in traditional woodwork, joinery and log-building. It has a pronounced beard and finger notch to allow a "choked" grip for precise control. The poll is generally designed for use as a hammer. Newer carpenter's hatchets will often have a groove for pulling nails as well.{FOOTNOTE()}Wikipedia contributors. "Carpenter's axe." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 21 Oct. 2018. Web. 7 Jan. 2019. {FOOTNOTE} *__{MOUSEOVER(label="Carving" closeDelay="3")}{img fileId="279" thumb="box" desc="The Gränsfors Large Carving Axe is used for woodworking and shaping wood."}{MOUSEOVER}__- The carving axe is the smaller of the other axe types. Used for rough shaping of smaller timbers and logs. The handle of the carving axe is roughly the same length of most hammer handles, and may have a pronounced curve in the handle from the lug of the axe head to the knob of the handle. This type of axe is popular among green woodworkers for it's agility in shaping and even paring down wood for final shaping in skilled hands. *__{MOUSEOVER(label="Felling" closeDelay="1")}{img fileId="274" thumb="box" width="400px" desc="Felling axe"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - Used for cutting down trees, the felling axe has an extremely sharp blade or (bit) with a slightly tapered head. The average head weight of a felling axe is between 2.5 to 3.5 lbs. The tapered head and sharp bit allow for cutting across the wood grain, and deeply with each strike by the user. *__Hand__ - To put it shortly, a hand axe is roughly twice the length and weight of a hatchet. The hand axe handle is typically at a 90 degree angle to the head. While the hatchet handle is generally curved. The hand axe is an all purpose axe popular at campsites and for general chopping and size reduction of wood. A true {MOUSEOVER(label="hand axe" width="200")}{img fileId="342" desc="Replica stone tools of the Acheulean industry, used by Homo erectus and early modern humans, and of the Mousterian industry, used by Neanderthals." alt="prehistoric hand axe"}{MOUSEOVER} is used by the hand and has its origins in pre-historic time periods. The head of the hand axe is gripped directly by one or two hands. It is the longest-used tool in human history and was typically "made of flint, but rhyolites, phonolites, quartzites and other coarse rocks were used as well. Obsidian, natural volcanic glass, shatters easily and was rarely used." {FOOTNOTE()}Wikipedia contributors. "Hand axe." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 7 Dec. 2018. Web. 19 Jan. 2019. {FOOTNOTE} *__Hatchet__ - Hatchets are used chiefly by carpenters in shingling and lathing. They have a short handle and can be used both for cutting and nailing. *__Mortising__ - Used for cutting mortise or tenon joints for log and timber housing and structures. *__{MOUSEOVER(label="Splitting" closeDelay="1")}{img fileId="339" desc="The Gransfors Bruk large splitting axe" alt="splitting axe"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - Splitting Axe can be used for splitting all types of firewood. It is forged and ground to a concave, quite thin blade at the bit. The axe cuts quickly and easily into the wood and then effectively splits it as the broader section pushes apart the wood. __Awl__ - A tool used for puncturing a small hole in wood, typically used for a starting guide prior to drilling a hole in the wood. The drill bit will be guided by the small puncture the awl creates. !B --- __{MOUSEOVER(label="Bench" closeDelay="1")}{img fileId="422" thumb="box" desc="Young boy using a basic workbench"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - The bench is a tool or appliance of the utmost importance to the woodworker. The best type of bench has a top that is constructed of narrow strips of hard wood, glued and bolted together. It usually has a recess or trough in which tools may be placed while working. The top is bolted to a frame consisting of four legs braced securely with cross-pieces. This frame is often fitted with one or more drawers. See various types below. *__Danish__ - *__European__ - *__{MOUSEOVER(label="Roubo" closeDelay="2")}{img type="fileId" fileId="423" thumb="box" width="400" desc="Work bench by Andre Jacob Roubo"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - The Roubo workbench is a design created and used by Andre Jacob Roubo who was a carpenter, designer, and author, born and died in Paris, France (1739 - 1791). The bench designed by Roubo has been copied for modern day use and woodworkers use design elements of his bench to incorporate into their own benches. An excellent example of a modern day {MOUSEOVER(label="Roubo Bench" closeDelay="2")}{img type="fileId" fileId="409" thumb="box" desc="Roubo bench by Kari Hultman"}{MOUSEOVER} by woodworker [http://villagecarpenter.blogspot.com/|Kari Hultman]. __Brace__ - See various types below. *__Bit brace extension__ - A bit-brace extension is a steel rod having a small chuck on one end and a square shank like a bit on the other. A bit, 5/8 in. or more in diameter, is inserted into the chuck of the extension, and this in turn into the chuck of the brace. The smallest hole that can be bored with this tool measures 5/8 in. Bit-brace extensions are made from 12 to 21 in. in length. The smallest hole that can be bored with the larger size measures 3/4 in. *__Plain brace__ - The plain brace is a tool used for holding a bit securely while boring a hole. At one end the brace has a chuck for clamping the bit, at the other, a knob. The handle of the brace is shaped like a crank. *__Ratchet brace__ - The ratchet brace is fitted with an attachment which permits boring in places where a complete turn cannot be made. The size of braces is given according to the sweep; i.e., the diameter of the circle that the handle makes in a complete revolution. __Boring__ - See various types below *__Auger bit__ - Auger bits are screw shaped tools consisting of two main parts, the twist and the shank. The twist ends in two sharp points, the nibs or spurs, which score the circle, and two cutting edges, the lips, which remove the shavings from within the scored circle. A small screw point, in the center of the cutting end, centers the bit and draws it into the wood. *__Auger bit gauge__ - Auger-bit gauges of different types can be fastened to auger bits, and adjusted so that only holes of certain depths are bored.. {img type="fileId" fileId="318" thumb="box" desc="Stanley No. 49 Auger Depth Gauge" alt="stanley auger depth gauge"} *__Dowel bit__ - Dowel bits are short auger bits 4 1/2 in. long over-all. Ordinary auger bits up to 1 in. diameter are from 7 to 9 in. long over-all. *__Car bit__ - Car bits and ship augers are auger bits from 18 to 24 in. in length. *__Expansion bit__ - Expansion bits have a movable cutter, which is adjustable to bore holes of different diameters. Expansion bits are made in two sizes. The largest size has three cutters, and bores holes up to 4 in. in diameter. *__{MOUSEOVER(label="Gimlet bit")}{img fileId="338" desc="Gimlet tool for boring small holes" alt="gimlet bit"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - A gimlet is a hand tool for drilling small holes, mainly in wood, without splitting. It was defined in Joseph Gwilt's Architecture (1859) as "a piece of steel of a semi-cylindrical form, hollow on one side, having a cross handle at one end and a worm or screw at the other". Gimlet bits are used for boring holes of small diameters such as are needed when inserting screws in hard wood. Their size, which varies from 1/16 to 3/8 in. by thirty-seconds, is stamped on the tang. *__Twist bit__ - Twist bits are shaped just like the familiar twist drill, except that they have a steeper cutting angle and a square tang. They range in size from 1/16 to 5/8 in. by thirty-seconds. Twist bits can be used for wood only, while twist drills can be used for both wood and metal. *__Forstner bit__- Forstner bits have no twist and no spur. They cut with a sharp circular steel rim and two lips within this rim. They bore very accurately, and are especially useful for boring thin wood and for end-wood boring. Their sizes are stamped on the tangs in sixteenths of an inch. *__Brad Awl__ - The bradawl has the appearance of a small screw driver. It is used for making holes into wood for screws and nails. The hole is produced by forcing the awl into the wood with a twisting motion. It should not be used in thin wood nor too near the edge. *__Rose Countersink__ - The countersink is a small, cone-shaped tool used for widening the end of holes bored for flat-head screws. One type can be opened and sharpened on an oil-stone. !C --- __Calipers__ - See various types below: *__Calipers inside__ - The inside calipers are used to measure the internal size of an object. *__Calipers outside__ - Entry needed *__Dial__ - *__Digital__- *__Jenny__- *__Spring joint__- *__Vernier__- __{MOUSEOVER(label="Card Scraper" closeDelay="1")}{img type="fileId" fileId="269" thumb="box" width="400px" desc="Smoothing a violin body with card scraper"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - A card scraper is a woodworking shaping and finishing tool. It is used to manually remove small amounts of material and excels in tricky grain areas where hand planes would cause tear out. Card scrapers are most suitable for working with hardwoods, and can be used instead of sandpaper. Scraping produces a cleaner surface than sanding; it does not clog the pores of the wood with dust, and does not leave a fuzz of torn fibers, as even the finest abrasives will do.{FOOTNOTE()}Wikipedia contributors. "Card scraper." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 16 Oct. 2017. Web. 23 Dec. 2018. {FOOTNOTE} __Chisel__ - (See various types below) According to their construction, chisels may be divided into two general classes: tang chisels, in which part of the chisel enters the handle, and socket chisels, in which the handle enters into a part of the chisel. *__Bevel edge__ - *__Butt__ - The butt chisel differs from the others only in that it has a shorter blade and, therefore, can be used in more inaccessible places. *__Carving__ - *__Corner__ - *__Dovetail__ - *__Firmer__ - The firmer chisel which is said to get its name from the fact that it is firmer or stiffer than the paring-chisel. The firmer-chisel is a general utility tool, being suited for hand pressure or mallet pounding, for paring or for light mortising. *__Flooring__ - *__Framing__ - The framing chisel has a very heavy and strong blade, and is used in rough carpentry work and shipbuilding. *__Mortise__ - The mortise chisel, as its name implies, is used for chiseling mortises. It is, therefore, very thick just below the handle so that it will not break when it is used as a lever in forcing the shavings out of the mortise. *__Paring__ - The paring chisel, which has a slender blade, is used mainly for hand chiseling. This type of chisel usually is beveled along the sides, so that fine work can be done, such as reeding which requires an extra-thin blade. *__Skew__ - *__Socket__ - *__Socket mortise__ - *__Tang paring__ - __Clamps__ - See various types below. *__Steel bar__ - Steel bar clamps consist of a steel beam or bar fitted with a screw and crank at one end, and a steel head which can be moved along the bar and fastened to it by means of slots cut into its lower edge at short intervals. Steel bar clamps are made in lengths of 2', 2' 6", 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 ft. *__C__ - C clamps, or screw clamps, sometimes called "carriage-maker's clamps," consist of a malleable-iron frame, bent in the shape of the letter C, and a steel screw with a swivel tip. They are made in sizes, which, when open, measure from 3 to 12 in. *__Column__ - Column clamps consist of a steel chain and a right and left screw. They are very useful when gluing together polygons, shaped columns, and any circular work such as the apron for a round table. *__Hand screw__ - Hand screws are most useful both in clamping up finished work and in holding work under construction. They consist of two jaws made of hard wood and two steel spindles, the end and middle spindles. They are opened or closed by grasping a handle in each hand and revolving the hand screw. The size of a hand screw is indicated by the length of the jaw in inches, the smallest being 6 in. and the largest 18 in. !D --- __Dividers/Compass__ - Entry needed __Draw Knife__ - The drawknife is used for rough cutting, especially on edges, both straight and curved. It is a tool with a long blade whose cutting edge is on the side. At each end of the blade is a handle. The operator grips the handles and draws the knife toward him. !E --- !F --- __Files__ - See various types below *__Flat__ - *__Half round__ - *__Round__ - {MOUSEOVER(label="__Froe__" closeDelay="3")}{img fileId="448" thumb="box" desc="Gransfors Bruk 12'' froe"}"The Gränsfors Froe is used to split wood very finely, for example when making shingles for a roof. The wood to be split is placed under the edge. The user steadies the tool with one hand on the vertical handle and strikes the blade with a mallet using the other hand.The handle is removable making it easier to transport." Source: https://woodsmithexperience.co.uk/shop/product/gransfors-bruk-12-froe/{MOUSEOVER} - {FOOTNOTE()}Wikipedia contributors. "Froe." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 14 May. 2018. Web. 8 Oct. 2019. {FOOTNOTE}A froe (or frow) or shake ((Axe|axe)) is a tool for cleaving wood by splitting it along the ((Grains and Figures in Wood|grain)). It is an L-shaped tool, used by ((Hammer|hammering)) one edge of its blade into the end of a piece of wood in the direction of the grain, then twisting the blade in the wood by rotating the haft (handle). !G --- !H --- __((Hammer))__ - See various types below *__Claw__ - The claw hammer is the type of hammer generally used by carpenters and woodworkers. The peen of this hammer is bent and shaped so that it can be used for pulling nails. The face of the hammer often is slightly convex, or bell-faced, so that it will not make a circular mark on the surface of the wood after striking the last blow on the head of a nail. It is important to keep the face of the hammer clean and free from grease or glue, so that it will not glance off the head of a nail and bend it. The size of the hammer is indicated by the weight of the head in pounds and ounces. *__Ball Pein__ - A ball-pein hammer, also known as a machinist's hammer, is a type of peening hammer used in metalworking. It is distinguished from a cross-peen hammer, diagonal-peen hammer, point-peen hammer, or chisel-peen hammer by having a hemispherical head. It is commonly used as a tool for metalworking. *__Cross and Straight Pein__ - These hammers have a wedge-shaped head instead of a ball-shaped head. This wedge shape spreads the metal perpendicular to the edge of the head. The straight-peen hammer has the wedge oriented parallel to the hammer's handle, while the cross-peen hammer's wedge is oriented perpendicular.{FOOTNOTE()}Wikipedia contributors. "Ball-peen hammer." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 24 Nov. 2018. Web. 9 Jan. 2019. {FOOTNOTE} *__Club__ - *__Sledge__ - *__Joiner's Mallet__ - Mallets are wooden hammers. As wood is more elastic than iron or steel, a mallet should always be used when driving on wood. The blows of a steel hammer would soon splinter a chisel handle and mar a joint to be driven together beyond repair. *__Soft-faced__ - __Handsaw__ - See various types below *__Ripsaw__ - The ripsaw is used for ripping or cutting with the grain along the straight line. Blades of ripsaws vary in length from 20 to 28 in. They are always wider at the handle than at the end, in order to prevent them from bending or buckling when they are pushed through the wood. *__Crosscut saw__ - The crosscut saw is similar in shape and appearance to the ripsaw. The only difference lies in the shape of the teeth, which are filed to a point instead of square across as on a ripsaw. The number of points to the inch varies from 8 to 12. *__Backsaw__ - The backsaw is a crosscut saw wtih a thin blade and fine teeth. A heavy piece of steel fitted over the back of the thin blade prevents it from buckling. The blades of backsaws are from 8 to 18 in. long. Backsaws are used for finer work such as cheek and shoulder cuts on tenons. *__Dovetail saw__ - The dovetail saw is shaped like a backsaw, but has thinner, narrower blade and finer teeth. The handle of a dovetail saw is shaped like a chisel handle. The length of the blade varies from 6 to 12 in. It is used for extremely fine work such as cutting of dovetails. *__Compass saw__ - shaped like a ripsaw, but its blade is so narrow that it can cut on curved line. It is particularly useful in cutting a section from within a board or panel. A hole is bored near the line to be cut and the pointed end of the saw inserted into this hole. *__Keyhole saw__ - is a smaller and finer compass saw. *__((Mortise and Tenon|Tenon saw))__ - The ((Mortise and Tenon|#Tenon|tenon)) saw has a higher blade body in the back-saw class of saws. It's stout and firm blade allows deep cuts for joinery and prevents binding in the material. The Tenon saw is often used as a carcass saw. *__Turning saw__ - consists of a very narrow blade, about 3/16 in. wide, which is held under tension in a frame. It has ripsaw teeth and is used for cutting curves, as the blade usually can be revolved in the frame. It can also be set in the frame so that it cuts either on the pulling or the pushing stroke. *__Hack saw__ - is not properly a woodworker's tool, but is often a very convenient tool to have in the shop. It has a narrow blade set in a long, narrow metal frame, and is used for cutting metals. *__Coping saw__ - is a very small turning saw usually having a metal frame. It is used for sawing fretwork patterns and coping moldings. !I --- !J --- !K --- !L --- __Lathe (human powered) __- See various types below *__Pole lathe__ - *__Treadle lathe__ - __Level__ - Used for checking vertical surfaces for plumb or horizontal surfaces for level. Typically a straight solid piece of wood or metal, or plastic, with one or multiple vials full of a liquid, and a bubble that will visually indicate if the surface is level or plumb. !M --- __Marking gauge__ - See various types below *__Gauge butt__ - differs from a mortising gauge in that its spurs are at extreme ends of the beams. It can, therefore, be used in internal corners such as door jamb when gauging for the width of the hinges. It is made of steel and has three spurs. *__{MOUSEOVER(label="Gauge marking" closeDelay="1")}{img fileId="337" desc="Stanley marking gauge in wood and Veritas in metal" alt="marking gauge"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - made of wood or steel. The one most commonly used consists of a square, wooden bar or beam, about 8 in. long, on which a wooden block or head slides. This block can be fastened at any point of the bar by means of a brass set-screw bearing against a brass shoe. The block, on the best grade of gauge, is protected from wear by a piece of brass set flush with its surface. The bar is graduated in inches and provided with a steel point or spur fastened near the end with a screw. The spur must be filed to a fine point. This tool is used for marking or gauging widths on narrow pieces of wood, such as table legs, etc. When using it. move the gauge away from you, and tip is slightly forward, keeping the block in contact with the edge or face of the board at all times. *__{MOUSEOVER(label="Gauge mortising" closeDelay="1")}{img fileId="336" desc="Mortise marking gauge" alt="mortise marking gauge"}{MOUSEOVER}__ - is a marking gauge with two spurs, which can be spaced at different distances and mark two parallel lines at the same time. One type is made of rosewood and has and adjusting screw in the end of the beam, which moves one of the points up or down the as desired. The other side of the beam is fitted with a single point as an ordinary marking gauge. This gauge is used chiefly for layout out mortises and tenons. Other types are made entirely of metal and have two bars. *__Gauge slitting__ - is similar to the panel gauge, but has a handle in addition to the block. It has a knife instead of a spur and is used for cutting thin stock. __Measuring tape__ - Used by carpenters, contractors, and architects. They are made of steel or cloth, and usually measure from 25 to 100 ft. in length. They are divided into inches and feet, or meters and centimeters. __Miter box__ - Entry needed __Miter and try-square__ - can be used at both 90 and 45 degrees. Miter squares can only be used for angles of 45 degrees. !N --- __Nail set__ - Nail sets are small steel bars about 4 to 5 in. long and 1/4" in diameter. They have a cup-shaped point, and are used to set nails below the surface. The size of the point varies with the size of the nail to be set. !O --- !P --- __Planes__ - See various types below. *__Jack plane__ - A jack plane is a general-purpose woodworking bench plane, used for dressing timber down to the correct size in preparation for truing and/or edge jointing. It is usually the first plane used on rough stock, but in exceptional cases can be preceded by the scrub plane. *__Fore plane__ - The fore plane is built exactly like a jack plane, but is 18 in. long and has a plane iron 2 in. wide. *__Jointer plane__ - The jointer is also like the jack plane, but is 22 to 24 in. long, and has a plane iron 2 3/8 in. or 2 5/8 in. wide. The latter two planes are used for leveling larger surfaces and for jointing the edges of boards to be glued. *__Smooth plane__ - The smooth plane is of the same construction as the above named planes, but it is shorter, being from 5 1/2 in. to 10 in. in length. *__Circular plane__ - The circular plane differs from the others in that it has a flexible bottom 10 in. long, which can be adjusted to either convex or concave curves. It is used on curved work, such as round table tops and aprons. *__Block plane__ - The block plane is a small plane from 4 to 8 in. long. It has only a single plane iron, which is placed at a very low angle with the beveled side up. The lever cap is generally curved so that it fits smoothly within the hollow of the hand. This plane is used for planing end wood and in places where an ordinary plane could not be used. *__Bullnose plane__ - The bullnose rabbet plane is about 4 in. long, and has the plane iron fastened to the extreme front of the body. *__Rabbet and Fillister plane__ - The rabbet and fillister plane is an iron plane used for planing grooves or rabbets on the edges of a board. It has both a depth and a width gauge, as well as a spur, which scores the wood in advance of the plane iron, thereby preventing splitting. *__Dado plane__ - A dado plane is similar to a rabbet plane, but is used for cutting across the grain. *__Match plane__ - A matching plane is used for matching boards; i.e., plowing a groove on the edge of one and a tongue on the edge of the other. It has two cutters, a plow and a tongue cutter. *__Router plane__ - The router plane is used for removing the wood between two sawed or chiseled edges such as dadoes or grooves. The plane iron is lowered after each cut. It is furnished with a 1/4 in., a 2 1/5 in., and a smoothing cutter. *__Universal plane__ - The universal plane is a very complicated piece of apparatus for planing moldings, dadoes, beads, flutes, etc. It is furnished with as many as 53 different cutters. *__Molding planes__ - Molding planes are wooden planes, having but one plane iron for one particular type of molding. Wooden planes of all types are still used a great deal, especially by European cabinetmakers and carpenters. The inexperienced worker finds them more difficult to adjust, but they have certain advantages over the iron planes. One of these is lighter weight, which is especially noticeable on jointer planes, and another is that shavings from resinous woods do not stick to their bottoms. *__Plane gauge__ - Plane gauges are made both for iron and wooden planes. They can be attached to the sides of smooth, jack, fore, or jointer planes, and enable the operator to plane bevels or chamfers of any angle on the edge of a board without the continuous use of a bevel or try-square. __Plumb bob__ - A plumb bob, or plummet, is a weight, usually with a pointed tip on the bottom, suspended from a string and used as a vertical reference line, or plumb-line. It is essentially the vertical equivalent of a "water level". !Q --- !R --- __Rasps__ - See various types below *__Wood__ - *__Metal__ - *__Ceramic and Glass__ - __Rifflers__ - See various types below *__Die sinker__ - *__Silversmith__ - __Rule__ - Rules are made in different lengths and of different materials. Those used by woodworkers are usually of the folding type, and measure from 2 to 8 feet in length. Rules are generally marked off on both sides in inches and subdivisions of an inch, but they are also made with such divisions on one side and metric divisions on the other. !S --- __Scraper__ - Scrapers are of two kinds; those sharpened like a plane iron and held in an iron frame or plane body, and those that have square edges and are held in the hand only. The first class is called ''cabinet scrapers" or "scraper planes," and the last type is called "hand scrapers." Hand scrapers having curved edges are called "molding scrapers." Scrapers are used for smoothing a surface after it has been planed. Cross-grained and highly figured woods must always be scraped. __Screwdriver__- {FOOTNOTE()}Wikipedia contributors. "Screwdriver." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 7 Oct. 2019. Web. 5 Nov. 2019. {FOOTNOTE}A screwdriver is a tool, manual or powered, for screwing and unscrewing screws. A typical simple screwdriver has a handle and a shaft, ending in a tip the user puts into the screw head before turning the handle. The shaft is usually made of tough steel to resist bending or twisting. * Phillips - {FOOTNOTE(tag="driver")}History of Screws and Screwdrivers. http://theinventors.org/library/inventors/blscrewdriver.htm. Accessed 5 Nov. 2019. {FOOTNOTE}In the early 1930s, the Phillips head screw was invented by Henry Phillips. Automobile manufacturers now used car assembly lines. They needed screws that could take greater torque and could provide tighter fastenings. The Phillips head screw was compatible with the automated screwdrivers used in assembly line. * Slotted - {footnote sameastag="driver"}Around the first century CE, screw-shaped tools became common, however, historians do not know who invented the first. Early screws were made from wood and were used in wine presses, olive oil presses, and for pressing clothes. Metal screws and nuts used to fasten two objects together first appeared in the fifteenth century. The heads on these types of screws have one slot for the driver to engage. {MOUSEOVER(label="__Shave horse__" closeDelay="3")}{img fileId="449" thumb="box" desc="19th Century Shave Horse"}{MOUSEOVER} - {FOOTNOTE()}Wikipedia contributors. "Shaving horse." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 7 Sep. 2019. Web. 11 Oct. 2019. {FOOTNOTE}A shaving horse is a combination of vice and ((Workbench|workbench)), used for green woodworking. Typical usage of the shaving horse is to create a round profile along a square piece, such as for a chair leg or to prepare a work piece for the pole lathe. They are used in crafts such as coopering and bowery. __Sliding T bevel__ - are similar to try-squares, but differ in that their blades are adjustable to any angle. They are used for laying out angles other than right angles, as for instance, corners braces, dovetails, or side rails for chairs. __Spoke shave__ - The spokeshave is like a plane with a very short bottom. It is, therefore, suitable for smoothing curves that are too small for a circular spokeshave plane. Spokeshaves are made in many patterns, generally with an iron body. One type, the patternmaker's spokeshave, is made of wood. __Saw__ - See various types below * Back saw - * Bow saw - * Buck saw - * Coping saw - * Cross cut saw - * Dovetail saw - * Fret saw - * Hacksaw - * Japanese saw - * Keyhole saw - * Rip saw - * Turning saw - * Veneer saw - !T --- __Trammel points__ - __Try-square__ - Used for testing the squareness of lumber, and in checking the squareness of work being assembled, especially in places where a framing square would be too large. Try-squares consist of two parts, the stock and the blade, which are firmly fastened together at right angles. The stock is thick and made of wood or iron. The blade, which is thin, is made of steel and has an inch scale stamped on it. Try-squares are made in sizes from 4 to 12 in., measured from the end of the blade to the stock. !U --- !V --- !W --- !X --- !Y --- !Z --- !File References {files fileId="70" showaction="y" showicon="y" showfilename="n" showdescription="y" slideshow="y" slidewidth="100%" showlasteditor="n" showthumb="n"} !Reference {footnotearea } {showreference showtitle="yes" hlevel="1"}
History
Enable pagination
rows per page
HTML diff
Side-by-side diff
Side-by-side diff by characters
Inline diff
Inline diff by characters
Full side-by-side diff
Full side-by-side diff by characters
Full inline diff
Full inline diff by characters
Unified diff
Side-by-side view
HTML diff
Side-by-side diff
Advanced
Information
Version
05-08-2020 08:11
admin
moved card scraper
204
05-08-2020 08:07
admin
added link for roubo
203
04-11-2020 15:53
admin
added tick marks for foot numbers
202
02-06-2020 19:44
admin
img Plugin modified by editor.
201
02-06-2020 19:43
admin
added image
200
02-06-2020 19:35
admin
added gutenberg footnote
199
01-13-2020 18:15
anonymous
layout
198
01-03-2020 09:58
John Morris
files Plugin modified by editor.
197
01-03-2020 09:57
John Morris
files Plugin modified by editor.
196
01-03-2020 09:55
John Morris
link update
195
12-13-2019 06:25
John Morris
img Plugin modified by editor.
194
12-13-2019 06:24
John Morris
image
193
12-13-2019 06:23
John Morris
layout
192
12-13-2019 06:22
John Morris
img Plugin modified by editor.
191
12-07-2019 16:49
John Morris
added spring pole lathe reference
190
11-27-2019 18:03
John Morris
footnote
189
11-27-2019 18:02
John Morris
calipers
188
11-27-2019 16:48
John Morris
img Plugin modified by editor.
187
11-07-2019 04:16
John Morris
img Plugin modified by editor.
186
11-07-2019 04:16
John Morris
img Plugin modified by editor.
185
11-07-2019 04:15
John Morris
added image
184
11-05-2019 04:24
admin
added rifflers
183
11-05-2019 04:18
admin
added chisels
182
11-04-2019 20:02
admin
change cat
181
11-04-2019 20:00
admin
added driver desc
180
Select action to perform with checked...
Remove
OK
«
1
2
3
(current)
4
5
…
11
»
Related content
Most Popular Tags
adze
american woods
axe
broadleaf
broadleaf aspen
broadleafs
community
conifers
dendrology
eco friendly
education
froe
glossary
green
green woodworking
hammer
hard wood
hard woods
hardwoods
hickory
history
how to
joinery
literature
machinery
material processing
media
merchants
mortise
people
plane
poplar
safety
shaker
shave
society
soft woods
spokeshave
sustainable
template
tenon
terminology
tools
wood
works