Tool and system for forming multiple woodworking joints
11780111 · 2023-10-10
Inventors
Cpc classification
B27C5/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
An apparatus is described that is suitable for mounting in a variety of orientations and for forming a variety of woodworking joints at a high throughput. The apparatus is directed to a tool that couples with a power tool to either plunge into or cross feed through a workpiece. The apparatus is particularly well suited for forming biscuit dado, dado, mortise, tenon, floating tenon, dowel, bridle, half lap, tongue, and groove joints, without requiring significant tool changes.
Claims
1. An apparatus to create a variety of joints in a woodworking piece, the apparatus comprising: a bottom plate comprising a first half and second half; a joint interconnecting an edge of the first half of the bottom plate to an opposing edge of the second half of the bottom plate, wherein the first half is rotationally joined to the second half at the joint, wherein the first half and second half articulate between a planar position and a right angle position; the first half having at least two parallel rails extending from a top surface of the first half and further extending from a joint end to a free end of the first half; the second half having a grid of t-slots formed and extending into a top surface of the second half; a top plate that interlocks and slidingly engages with the parallel rails of the first articulating half of the bottom plate; the top plate having a router opening extending through the top plate from a top surface of the top plate to a bottom surface of the top plate, wherein a perimeter of the router opening has sides of the opening that are enclosed by sidewalls; an inset with compressible locking guides, wherein the router opening of the top plate is adapted for receiving the inset within the router opening, and the inset interlocks with the router opening sidewalls within the router opening of the top plate; the inset having an aperture extending through the inset from a top surface to a bottom surface of the inset, such that a center of the aperture aligns with a center of the router opening when the inset interlocks with the router opening; and wherein the inset is bi-directional in 90 degree increments and interlocks with the router opening of the top plate in multiple orientations.
2. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, further including a scale associated with the first half of the bottom plate; the scale being recessed from the top surface of the first half; and the scale extending parallel with the rails from a rotational end to a free end of the first half.
3. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the inset has a top pocket extending into the inset from the top surface wherein the top pocket is adapted for receiving a router template and wherein the inset has a bottom pocket extending into the inset from the bottom surface.
4. The apparatus as recited in claim 3, wherein the router template is adaptable for receiving a router guide bushing.
5. The apparatus as recited in claim 3, further including a transparent bottom template that fits within the bottom pocket of the inset, the bottom template including alignment markings associated with the transparent bottom template.
6. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, further including a 90 degree fence that couples with the second half of the bottom plate.
7. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, further including a 45 degree fence that couples with the second half of the bottom plate.
8. The apparatus as recited in claim 6, further including a toggle clamp that couples to the 90 degree fence.
9. The apparatus as recited in claim 7, further including a toggle clamp that couples to the 45 degree fence.
10. The apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the bottom plate joint includes a quick release lock to fix the first half and second half at a desired angular orientation.
11. An apparatus to create a variety of joints in a woodworking piece, the apparatus comprising: a bottom plate comprising a first half and second half; the first half rotationally joined to the second half at a joint, wherein the first half and second half articulate between a planar position and a right angle position; the first half having at least two parallel slots extending into the first half from a top surface and further extending from a joint end to a free end of the first half; the second half having a grid of t-slots formed and extending into a top surface of the second half; a top plate that interlocks and slidingly engages with the parallel slots of the first articulating half of the bottom plate; the top plate having a router opening extending through the top plate; an inset with compressible locking guides, wherein the inset interlocks within the router opening of the top plate, and wherein the inset has a top pocket extending into the inset from a top surface and a bottom pocket extending into the inset from a bottom surface; and a top template that fits within the top pocket of the inset and is adaptable for receiving a router guide bushing.
12. The apparatus as recited in claim 11, further including a scale associated with the first half of the bottom plate; the scale being recessed from the top surface of the first half; and the scale extending parallel with the rails from a rotational end to a free end of the first half.
13. The apparatus as recited in claim 11, further including a transparent bottom template that fits within the bottom pocket of the inset, the bottom template including alignment markings associated with the transparent bottom template.
14. The apparatus as recited in claim 11, further including a 90 degree fence that couples with the second half of the bottom plate.
15. The apparatus as recited in claim 11, further including a 45 degree fence that couples with the second half of the bottom plate.
16. The apparatus as recited in claim 14, further including a toggle clamp that couples to the 90 degree fence.
17. The apparatus as recited in claim 15, further including a toggle clamp that couples to the 45 degree fence.
18. The apparatus as recited in claim 11, wherein the bottom plate joint includes a quick release lock to fix the first half and second half at a desired angular orientation.
19. An apparatus to create a variety of joints in a woodworking piece, the apparatus comprising: a bottom plate comprising a first half and second half; a joint interconnecting an edge of the first half of the bottom plate to an opposing edge of the second half of the bottom plate, wherein the first half is rotationally joined to the second half at the joint, wherein the first half and second half articulate between a planar position and a right angle position; a top plate that interlocks and slidingly engages with the first articulating half of the bottom plate; the top plate having a cavity formed in the top plate and having a sidewall extending from a top surface of the top plate to a bottom surface of the top plate; an inset adapted to fit within the cavity of the top plate, the inset having at least two compressible locking guides, wherein the compressible locking guides engage with the sidewall of the cavity to interlock the inset within the cavity; the inset having an aperture extending through the inset from a top surface to a bottom surface of the inset, such that a center of the aperture of the inset aligns with a center of the cavity when the inset interlocks within the cavity; and wherein the inset interlocks with the cavity of the top plate in multiple 90 degree incremented orientations.
20. The apparatus as recited in claim 19, wherein the inset has a top pocket extending into the inset from the top surface wherein the top pocket is adapted for receiving a router template.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) In the various figures, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, like numerals throughout the figures identify substantially similar components.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(37) The following description provides detail of various embodiments of the invention, one or more examples of which are set forth below. Each of these embodiments are provided by way of explanation of the invention, and not intended to be a limitation of the invention. Further, those skilled in the art will appreciate that various modifications and variations may be made in the present invention without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention. By way of example, those skilled in the art will recognize that features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment, may be used in another embodiment to yield a still further embodiment. Thus, it is intended that the present invention also cover such modifications and variations that come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
(38) The tool and system 10 for forming multiple woodworking joints of the present invention includes interlocking top and bottom plates 20 and 100 and an inset 200 with compressible locking guides 250. Alternatively, the tool and system 10 may include an interlocking pocket hole top plate 500 in combination with bottom plate 100. The system 10 may further include ninety degree fence 300 and forty-five degree fence 400. A router may be mounted in a fixed position to the top plate 20 and a workpiece may be fed past the bit of the router or, alternatively, the workpiece may be clamped to the top or bottom plate and the router actuated within a template of inset 200. Although those skilled in the art will appreciate that other mounting methods are possible, three possible orientations are described. First, the top plate may be fixed or mounted to the bench with half of the bottom plate overhanging a side of the bench. In this orientation a router may be either fixed to the top plate or may float freely over the surface of the top plate. The router bit would be aligned in a vertical orientation. Second, half of the bottom plate may be mounted to a top or side of the bench. In one embodiment, a second half 150 of bottom plate 100 is mounted to a side of the bench and the first half 110 of bottom plate 100 is articulated to 90 degrees relative to the second half plate 110. Top plate 20 engages and slides over the first half 110 of the bottom plate 100, such that the router pocket is aligned over the bench. A router bit would be aligned in a vertical orientation. The second half 150 of the bottom plate may be used as a fence and a work piece may be slid under the router bit. In another embodiment the second half 150 is mounted to a top surface of the bench and the first half 110 and top plate 20 overhang from a side of the bench. In this orientation the router bit would be oriented horizontally and a bottom surface of the top plate 20 may be utilized as a fence such that a workpiece is slid past the horizontally oriented bit. The first plate 110 may be adjusted at an angle less than ninety degrees towards the bench so that an angle may be cut along an edge of a workpiece as it fed past the horizontal bit. Alternatively, the first plate 110 may be mounted to a side of the bench and the second plate 150 may articulate between zero and ninety degrees. In this orientation angled slots, for example, may be formed in a workpiece that is fed past the router bit. Thirdly, the top plate 20 may be flipped upside down such that a router bit faces vertically upward. The top plate may be recesses in a top surface of the bench so that the bottom of the top plate and the bench surface form a continuous plane for a workpiece to slide over. The bottom plate 100 may be mounted to the top plate to act as an adjustable fence for a workpiece being fed past the upwardly extending router bit.
(39) The woodworking tool and system of the present invention is particularly well suited for creating a variety of joints including a biscuit dado, dado, mortise, tenon, floating tenon, dowel, bridle, half lap, tongue, groove and other woodworking joints. For purposes of clarity and without limitation each of these joints will be briefly described. Typically, a biscuit joint includes a wooden piece (the biscuit, square or oval) that's glued into a dado or crescent shaped slot cut into each workpiece to be joined. The slot is cut larger than the biscuit to allow for adjustment and adhesive. Alternatively, a common dado joint includes a slot that is cut into a first workpiece wherein the slot has an approximately equal thickness as a portion of a second workpiece that is intended to be inserted into the slot. By way of example, bookshelves have used dados to secure the shelving into the inner sides of the bookshelf.
(40) A mortise and tenon joint is a common and traditional joint in woodworking because it provides a rigid and secure joint. A tenon or stub is formed into an end of a workpiece by cutting around the end to a certain predetermined depth and length. The tenon is sized to fit within a hole commonly referred to as the mortise. The mortise mirrors the shape of the tenon and is cut into a surface of a workpiece at a desired location. The hole or mortise is oftentimes rectangular in shape. A loose mortise and tenon joint (also known as a floating tenon joint) refers to a joint that includes a mortise in both work pieces and a small insert that is shaped and sized to fit within the two mortises when the two work pieces are aligned and brought together. This joint is similar to the biscuit joint. Glue or other adhesive is used to secure the small insert in each mortise to thereby secure the two workpieces together.
(41) A dowel joint butts the end of a workpiece into another workpiece and is reinforced or fixed in place with dowel pins, making the connection very strong once glued. The dowel joint may be quickly created in a production line. A bridle joint requires cutting a shape into a workpiece in a shape similar to a fork. The end of the joining workpiece is cut into a tenon or “necked joint” that has a shape to mirror and fit within the fork shape of the other workpiece. A joint having common traits with the bridle joint is a dovetail joint. The dovetail joint typically cuts multiple angled tabs that fit snuggly into shape mirroring slots. The tabs and slots have trapezoidal shapes and are known for creating a joint that is very difficult to separate. A half lap joint requires overlapping two workpieces. When making a half lap joint an end of one workpiece is overlapped and connected to another workpiece. Half of the end material is dadoed out of each end of the workpiece so that when the two workpieces are joined together a continuous flat surface is formed. A joint similar to the half lap is a tongue and groove joint, however the tongue and groove joint often runs lengthwise along an edge of each woodworking piece. One piece has a groove cut along an entire edge. The joining workpiece has a thin protrusion or ridge (the tongue) along its entire edge. The tongue is aligned along the edge and sized to fit snuggly into the groove.
(42) Turning attention now to the Figures, embodiments according to aspects of the invention will now be described in conjunction with the variety of woodworking joints capable of being made with the invention. Referring first to
(43) Bottom plate 100 includes first half 110 and second half 150. Rotation cylinder 130 is fixed to end 120 of the first plate 110. A concave recess is formed in end 162 that mates and rotates about fixed cylinder 130. Mounting or rotation bracket 182 is fixed to the sides of the second half 150 of the bottom plate 100. The bracket 182 aligns and is adjacent the concave recess. The second half 150 rotates about the cylinder of the first plate 110. A quick release lock 180 and lever 184 fix the second half at a desired angle relative to the first plate 110. For example, the plates may be aligned so that they form a single planar bottom plate 100 or the second plate may be rotated through ninety degrees and locked in place at any desired angle between zero to ninety degrees. A grid 172 of t-slots 170 are formed in the top surface 152 of the second half 150 of the bottom plate 100. The t-slots 170 are adapted for receiving t-slot insert 630 of toggle clamp 600.
(44) Inset 200 includes a top surface 202 and bottom surface 204 and a compressible locking guide 250 that allows a user to lock the insert 200 within the inset pocket 40 of the top plate 20. Finger reliefs 42 are formed in the top plate 20 that allows a user to more easily grip and compress the lock guides 250. The inset 200 further includes removable top template 224 and bottom template 234. As will be described in greater detail below, the bottom template 234 includes hash marks that allows a user to precisely position the top plate over a workpiece clamped to the second half 150 of the bottom plate 100. The top template 224 includes a router channel 226. The user may insert the router bit into the router channel. The user may slide the router over the top plate 20 while the guide bushing of the router abuts the sidewall of the router channel to define the outer path or confines of the router bit. The router channel may have different lengths, widths and shapes to define different tool paths of the router bit. Many interchangeable top templates 224 having different sized and shaped router channels may be incorporated into the inset 200.
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(46) Toggle clamp 600 is used to press and secure a workpiece against the flat surface of the second half 150 of bottom plate 100 when the workpiece is aligned in the desire position. An edge of the workpiece is pressed flush against an edge 306 of the fence 300 so that the user knows that the length axes of the router bit is parallel with the edge of the workpiece. Various templates 224 and alignment of the workpiece with the router channel 226 provides a setup to quickly interchange multiple workpieces requiring the same cut or routing. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that alignment of the second half 150 of the bottom plate 100 in conjunction with use of the toggle clamp 600 is particularly well suited for quick interchanges and formation of biscuit joints, mortise and tenon, portions of a dowel joint, bridle joints, dovetails, half laps and tongue and groove. Some of these joint may require reorienting the fence 300 so that the workpiece may be fed under and through the router bit.
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(49) The first half 110 includes a top surface 112, bottom surface 114, first side 116, second side 118, first end 120 and second end 122. Similarly, the second half plate 150 includes top surface 152, bottom surface 154, a first side 156, a second side 158, a first end 160 and a second end 162. A grid 172 of t-slots 170 are formed in the top surface 152 of the second half 150 of the bottom plate 100. The t-slots 170 are adapted for receiving t-slot insert 630 of toggle clamp 600. Mounting holes 174 and 176 are provided on the top surface 152 and sides 156 and 158 of the second half plate 150. Mounting holes 174 may extend through the plate or may extend through a portion of the plate. The first half plate 110 includes slots 146 that are adapted to receive scales or rulers 148. The scale may be scaled in inches or metric with closely spaced markings to allow for precise positioning of the top plate 20 relative to the first half plate 110. By way of example the scale may include markings spaced apart every 0.010 inches. The first half plate further includes mounting holes 124 and 126 extending into the top surface 202 and sides 206 and 208 of the first half plate 110. Mounting holes 124 may be threaded and extend through the plate. The mounting holes 124 may be threaded and counter bored 128 to allow for fasteners such as nuts to be utilized while allowing the first half plate 110 rest flat on a table or other planar surface. Knob 640 includes threaded shaft 642 that may screw into the mounting holes 124.
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(51) Knobs 640 include a threaded shaft 642 that slides within slots 60 extending through the top plate 20. When the knob is turned (in a predefined direction dependent upon the direction of the threading on the threaded shaft), a bottom of the knob engages the top plate and causes the top plate to press against the first half 110 of the bottom plate 100 thereby holding the top plate 20 firmly in place. Threaded apertures 66 extend into the top plate and are aligned around the insert pocket 40. The threaded apertures 66 may be utilized to clamp or otherwise secure a router (not shown) to the top plate 20. Rail slots 86 are formed in the bottom 24 of the top plate 20 and are aligned with rail slots 140 formed in a top surface 112 of the first half 110 of the bottom plate 100. An insert may be affixed within the slot 86 or slot 140 to form a rail into which the opposing slot may ride. The rail may be constructed from a durable polymer such as Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), Polyether Ether Ketone (PEEK), nylon or fiber filled nylons, a polypropylene or other known suitable polymer. The slots and rails allow the top plate 20 to be slid over the first half of the bottom plate 100 with minimal effort and in a precise direction and controlled increments.
(52) The mounting holes 70 extending into sides 26 and 28 may be threaded and utilized to mount brackets, fences or guides to a side or sides of the top plate 20. Slots 80 may be used in conjunction with t-slot inserts 630 to mount either fence 300 or fence 400 to the bottom 24 of top plate 20. Either fence may be used alone or in conjunction with the bottom plate 100. A horizontal style or push pull style toggle clamp 600 may be attached to either fence 300 or 400 to provide a clamping against the workpiece in a desired position. When used alone, the fence may be used as a guide along the edge of a workpiece to push or pull the top plate 20 and router over the workpiece. Use of the top plate and fence is particularly useful when cutting dados, grooves or ornamental edging into a workpiece.
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(59) These and various other aspects and features of the invention are described with the intent to be illustrative, and not restrictive. This invention has been described herein with detail in order to comply with the patent statutes and to provide those skilled in the art with information needed to apply the novel principles and to construct and use such specialized components as are required. It is to be understood, however, that the invention can be carried out by specifically different constructions, and that various modifications, both as to the construction and operating procedures, can be accomplished without departing from the scope of the invention. Further, in the appended claims, the transitional terms comprising and including are used in the open ended sense in that elements in addition to those enumerated may also be present. Other examples will be apparent to those of skill in the art upon reviewing this document.