r/BeginnerWoodWorking 6d ago

Discussion/Question ⁉️ Pine board composition.

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Learning to hand cut dovetails. Been a long week. Why are the insides of some of these big box pine boards like this? Some are solid and compact like the bottom board with the tails. Some are loose and falling apart like the top board with the pins. Why is this happening? Is it the board or me?

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u/No_BetterName 6d ago

I’ll add that it’s not your technique. As others have said, pine sometimes tears easier than it cuts. Chisels have to be razor sharp to minimize tear out and some woodworkers even have a set of chisels with a 17 degree bevel angle for softwoods like this. The lower bevel angle helps but doesn’t always eliminate it completely. Less chopping work and more slicing “handwork” with the chisel in narrow passes as you approach your line also helps. Good luck.

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u/CtrayX 6d ago

Thank you. I watched Paul Sellers chisel sharpening and got a 3 step stone set from DMT. Based on some of the triage I did on my hand this morning, I think they're sharp. Theyre 25 degrees... I did not know there was another angle to consider. I wanted cheap material to learn to do this by hand but maybe this is too soft as others have said. And I do realize that this is all hidden but did not want to set up the joint for long term structural failure. I considered that maybe this ends up being helpful for glue to settle into and I shouldn't really be that concerned.

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u/Fl48Special 6d ago

25 is fine for this, I do a lot of pine