| American School (Chicago, Ill.) - Engineering - 1906 - 588 pages
...31. Tenon-and-Tusk Joints. Fig. 32. available. This same bearing surface must be provided in eveiy case no matter whether the timber rests directly on...The Tenon-and-Tusk Joint. A joint in very common use ART GLASS CHORCH WINDOV/ Foster-MimpT Company in such situations as have just been mentioned is a development... | |
| Architectural drawing - 1910 - 476 pages
...of tenon shown is employed. The available bearing area here is furnished by the surfaces da and bo and it may easily be seen that this area is the same...The Tenon-and-Tusk Joint. A joint in very common use S3 in such situations as have just been mentioned is a development of the gained joint which is called... | |
| 1913 - 476 pages
...required amount of bearing surface without cutting the piece too much, the form of tenon shown in Fig. 44 is employed. The available bearing area here is furnished...and one piece is said to be "gained" into the other. Tenon-and-Tusk Joint. A joint in very common use in such situations as those which have just been mentioned... | |
| Gilbert Townsend - Building - 1913 - 284 pages
...required amount of bearing surface without cutting the piece too much, the form of tenon shown in Fig. 44 is employed. The available bearing area here is furnished...one piece, is said to be "gained" into the other. Tenon-and-Tusk Joint. A joint in very common use in such situations as those which have just been mentioned... | |
| Architecture - 1917 - 522 pages
...required amount of bearing surface without cutting the piece too much, the form of tenon shown in Fig. 44 is employed. The available bearing area here is furnished...and one piece is said to be "gained" into the other. Tenon-and-Tusk Joint. A joint in very common use in such situations as those which have just been mentioned... | |
| United States. Army. Corps of Engineers Board on engineer troops - Engineer troops - 1917 - 904 pages
...their combined surface area is equal to that which would be available if the piece rested directly upon the sill. The operation of cutting such a tenon and...and one piece is said to be "gained" into the other. 6. Tenon and tusk joints (figs. 10 and 11). — This is a joint in very common use in such situations... | |
| Military engineering - 1917 - 1124 pages
...their combined surface area is equal to that which would be available if the piece rested directly upon the sill. The operation of cutting such a tenon and...and one piece is said to be "gained" into the other. 6. Tenon and tusk joints (figs. 10 and 11). — This is a joint in very common use in such situations... | |
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