Twin-Blade Joinery

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Woodworker using a table saw with a box jig to cut multiple wooden strips simultaneously

The fast way to make perfect tenons and tongues on the table saw

Joinery is probably the most exacting aspect of woodworking. It’s where thousandths of an inch matter. No kidding. If a tenon, for example, is even .004" (the thickness of a dollar bill) thinner than its mating mortise, the joint’s strength has been compromised, no matter how well glue appears to hold it together. Because cutting joints can be fussy and time-consuming, it makes sense to take advantage of any efficiencies where you can. 

This is where twin-blade joinery comes in. By stacking two identical blades together, you can reduce the time it takes to cut tenons, tongues, and other joints with parallel faces. At the same time, you’re ensuring accuracy. For example, a common way to cut tenons is to saw one cheek, then flip the stock around on your tenon jig to saw the opposite cheek. The problem with this is that any inconsistency in your stock thickness translates into inconsistency in your tenon thickness. As you’ll see, twin-blade joinery solves this problem, eliminating the need to fine-tune the tenon thickness for final fitting. The technique is just as effective at cutting accurate tongues on panel edges for the same reason. Although a different principle applies, twin-blade joinery is also the perfect approach to cutting double spline slots.

All the technique requires is two identical saw blades and some shop-made spacers. The small expense pays off big time, as you’ll find once you try the method.

Joinery Options

All four of these joints can be made quickly and precisely with twin-blade joinery.



Standard TenonDiagram showing a twin-blade mortise and tenon joint with dashed lines indicating the mortise depth.


Tongue

Diagram showing two plywood panels joined edge-to-edge with twin-blade dado grooves for alignment and glue-up.

Shallow Shoulder TenonDiagram showing twin-blade joinery with a tenon and matching mortise in wood pieces


Double Spline

Exploded view of twin-blade joinery showing angled cuts and interlocking wooden parts.

What it takes

Close-up of twin red circular saw blades mounted on a table saw with various spacer washers and a hand holding one washer.
Blades, spacers, and shims. The key to twin-blade joinery is a pair of matched blades. Full-sized blades provide maximum depth of cut, but the outer blades from a dado head will also work. What’s important is that the blades include some raker teeth–which are squared across, rather than beveled–to create a flat-bottomed cut. Spacers of 1⁄8"-thick aluminum create the gross blade offset, with shims of various thicknesses added to fine-tune the cut width. You can use commercial dado set shims, or make your own from aluminum cans, manila folder paper, and flat board from notepads. Mark or code your shims for easier setup.
Table saw setup with twin-blade jig and wooden box for cutting precise joinery slots
Tenon jig and ZCI. To cut tenons, you’ll need a tenon jig. A commercial model will work, but I prefer a shop-made version that rides the rip fence. You can outfit a jig with hold-downs if you like, although this can slow down production. Whatever jig you use, outfit it with a replaceable backer to eliminate exit tear-out. It’s important to outfit your table saw with a ZCI (zero-clearance insert) to prevent work from slipping downward into the throat plate opening, especially if you’re not using hold-downs on your jig. (For more on ZCI’s, see The ABC's of ZCI's, issue #53.) 

Hands guiding a metal template on a bandsaw table to cut precise joinery shapes.Make the spacers

You can make spacers from aluminum, brass, hardboard, or any other non-compressible material of a consistent thickness. For minimum material investment and greatest set-up flexibility for common tenon sizes, make six 1⁄8"-thick spacers. They don’t have to be perfectly concentric or of a precise diameter. (I make 3"-diameter spacers using 1⁄8"-thick aluminum plate.) Begin by using dividers to scribe out the perimeters, and then drill a 17⁄64"-diameter hole at the center of each.

Hands holding sandpaper attached to a drill press spindle for sanding wood surfaces
Smooth the perimeter. To clean up the edges for safe handling, first mount each spacer on a 1⁄4"-diameter bolt, securing it with a nut. Then chuck the setup in a drill press, and sand the edges with coarse-grit sandpaper.
Hand operating drill press with twist drill bit drilling through metal plate clamped to wood surface

Enlarge the arbor hole. Clamp each spacer to a backer board at the edge of your drill press table, and widen the center hole to 21⁄32". Sand or file away any remaining burrs afterward.

Hands using a feeler gauge to measure the gap on a red circular saw blade tooth.

Determine the winning combination

The thickness of a tenon or tongue is usually a specific increment (1⁄4", 5⁄16", 3⁄8", 1⁄2", etc.), based on the width of the chisel or diameter of the router bit that cut the mortise, dado, or groove. It takes some initial fussing to arrive at the correct combination of spacers and shims for any given thickness, but you only have to do it once, as long as you record it for future reference. You can do this totally by trial-and-error, or you can take a measured approach, as I’ll show you here, regarding the setup required for making a tenon.

Wood drill bits organized in a wooden case next to a handwritten chart of bit sizes, spacers, and shims for twin-blade
Keep a record. For future reference, keep a chart of the various spacer/shim combinations that work with your dedicated saw blade set. I keep my chart with my hollow chisel mortise set.
Hand guiding a wooden board with twin-blade dado cuts on a router table for joinery.
Set up, and test the cut. To set up for a test cut, mount your inner blade, followed up with spacers that total no more than your desired joint thickness. (Two 1⁄8" spacers for the 1⁄4" tenon are desired here.) Then add enough shims to account for twice the tooth offset. Add the outer blade, a ZCI, and then make a test cut. Try the fit in a sample mortise; it should be very close. Remove or add shims, and recut until the test tenon fits perfectly, requiring just a bit of hand pressure to fully insert it in its mortise.

Download blank spacer/shim charts from onlineEXTRAS at the bottom of this page.

Diagram showing a twin-blade mortise and tenon joint with dashed lines indicating the mortise depth.Cutting typical tenons

Typical tenons (with their relatively deep shoulders) involve a 2-step process: sawing the cheeks, then the shoulders. To ensure proper joint alignment during assembly, make sure to first accurately dress your workpieces to their final thickness, and mark the “show” face of every piece so you can orient it properly on the tenon jig. Once you’re set up, you can cut every tenon to precisely match its mortise width every time. Quickly follow up with the shoulder cuts, and you’re done.

Hands guiding a wooden box jig on a table saw with a sacrificial backer for cutting joinery.
Tenon cheeks done fast. Having set up the proper blade/spacer/shim configuration, place the workpiece “show” face out on the jig, using a sacrificial backer to prevent tearout. Position the jig to locate the cut, and then feed the workpiece over the blades. For the greatest precision, remove the sawn workpiece before retracting the jig to set up the next cut.
Hands guiding wood pieces through a table saw with a fence and clamp for joinery cuts.
Tenon shoulder cuts. To cut the shoulders, feed the work “on the flat” using a miter gauge. To prevent the freed waste from kicking back and possibly spoiling the cut, don’t use the rip fence as a stopblock. Instead, register the work against a raised stand-off block clamped to the fence.

Diagram showing twin-blade joinery with a matching tenon and mortise cut in wood pieces

Cutting shallow-shoulder tenons

When the tenoned member of a frame is thinner than the mortised member, you can get away with minimal tenon shoulders, in which case, you can cut the shoulders at the same time as the cheeks, making for really fast work. To ensure square shoulders, make sure to use blades that include raker teeth.

Tools & Supplies:

See Buyer’s Guide below.

Hand guiding two narrow wood strips through a twin-blade table saw for joinery cuts

Diagram showing two plywood panels joined with a twin-blade dado joint for strong edge connectionCutting tongues

Frame-and-panel joinery often involves sawing the panel edges to create a tongue that fits into a groove in the edges of the frame. The blade/spacer/shim setup is exactly the same as for sawing a tenon. The only difference is how the workpiece is fed.

Hands positioning plywood on a table saw with twin-blade setup and featherboards for joinery cuts.
A tongue that’s true. For stability, feed a panel on edge against a tall fence. Featherboards pressing the work against the fence will ensure that the tongue remains parallel to the faces of the panel.
Hands guiding plywood through a table saw with twin-blade setup and clamped fence for joinery cuts.
A safe chute for shoulder cuts. To prevent the freed waste from shooting out when sawing tongue shoulders, clamp a raised auxiliary fence to the rip fence for a pinch-free cut.

Diagram showing twin-blade joinery with interlocking angled and notched wood pieces.Better spline joinery

Gluing splines in a miter joint is a great way to reinforce what would otherwise be a weak connection. Although a single centered spline will work, two splines are much better. The joint strength is doubled, and the splines can be located closer to the faces of the stock, where they’ll better resist separation due to wood movement.

Hands guiding a wooden board with twin blades on a table saw using a wooden jig for joinery cuts

Buyer's Guide


Online Extras
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