Cutting dado joints is a great skill for beginning woodworkers to develop. Dado joints are particularly helpful when making beginner-friendly projects like bookshelves.
A dado joint connects the end of one piece of wood to the side of another, creating a right angle.
You start by cutting a slot across the grain of the one board. This dado slot has a bottom and two sides, or “shoulders.” The space between the shoulders should match the thickness of the wood you’re inserting, creating a physical connection that can be easily reinforced with glue.
Dado joints are commonly used in bookshelves, drawer dividers and any other project where the material will be supported by dadoes on both sides.
Yes. Dado joints should not be confused with rabbets.
A dado falls within the center of the material, consisting of a slot with a bottom and two shoulders. When viewed from the side, a dado looks like a capital ‘U.’ A rabbet, on the other hand, is cut into the end of the material. It has a bottom and one side, leaving the other side open. A rabbet’s profile resembles a capital ‘L’ cut into the wood.
However, there’s one variation of dado joint known as a “rabbet dado” or “rabbet and dado” joint. In this version, the dado is cut at a width that’s less than the thickness of the material to be joined. Then a rabbet is cut into the second material so the end can be inserted into the dado.
A quick note on terminology: Dado joints are typically cut across the grain of the receiving piece. If a cut goes along the grain, many woodworkers refer to it as a channel or groove (as in “tongue and groove”). In practice, many woodworkers simply refer to all of the above as a “dado” joint. As always, terminology varies by region and even from woodworker to woodworker.
There are two main types of dado joints:.
While it’s possible to cut a dado joint by hand (usually with a dado plane), it’s far more common to make the cut with a table saw or router and clean it up with hand tools.
Perhaps the most commonly-used tool to make dado joints is a table saw with a dado set. For those unfamiliar, a dado set is like a blade sandwich, with a stack of chippers sandwiched between two saw blades. The number of chippers determines the thickness of the dado.
But not all table saws accept dado sets, and not every woodworker owns a table saw. The other most common way to make a dado is with a router. Use a jig or a straight-edge clamped to your work piece and select an appropriately-sized router bit.
Pro tip: Use a router and straight edge to cut a wide dado. It can be easy to fall out of parallel when resetting the straightedge to make multiple passes, resulting in a tapered cut. Instead, set up two straightedges to establish clean, parallel edges of the dado. If there’s any additional material remaining in the center, simply remove it with a freehand router pass.
No matter how you make the initial pass on the dado, it’s common to smooth and level the opening with a combination of chisels, planes and files or sandpaper.
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