State Practice Exam Wood Joints
Identify the wood joint: Lap Joint
Identify the wood joint: Rabbet Joint
Identify the wood joint: Mortis & Tenon Joint
Identify the wood joint: Plough Joint
Identify the wood joint: Edge Joint
Identify the wood joint: Dowel Joint
Identify the wood joint: Butt Joint
Identify the wood joint: Dovetail Joint
Identify the wood joint: Miter Joint
Identify the wood joint: Dado
Identify the wood joint: Biscuit Joint
Identify the wood joint: Pocket Joint
Identify the wood joint: Lock Miter Joint
Identify the wood joint: Tongue & Groove Joint
Identify the wood joint: Blind Dado Joint
Identify the wood joint: Finger Joint
Used to strengthen a miter joint. Spline
Used on the corners of the best drawers. Rabbet Dowel Dado Dovetail
Used to inset a ¼” panel in the back of a cabinet. Rabbet Dowel Miter Dovetail
Used to fid a shelf into the side of a cabinet. Spline Dovetail Miter Dado
Most commonly used on the corners of picture frames. Spline Dovetail Miter Dado
Used to fit drawer bottoms into drawer sides. Dado Dovetail Dowel Plough
This joint is made with a drill or a boring machine. Dado Dovetail Dowel Plough
Hardwood flooring uses: Dowel joints Tongue & Groove joints Dovetail joints Miter joints
The biscuit joint is a form of a: Mortis & Tenon Dado Dowel Spline
Most commonly used in leg and rail construction. Plough Rabbet Mortis and Tenon Miter
Most likely joints for jointing rails to stiles in a face frame. Dowel Rabbet Dado Miter
An end-butt joint is stronger than an edge-butt joint. True False