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Lock Rabbet Drawer Joinery Panama City FL

Setting up the drawer lock bit is not difficult. Start by aligning this bit with the fence, as shown in Photo 1. Next, adjust the height of the bit to approximately 3/8 in. (Photo 2). Run a couple of test boards (Photo 3) and check the fit (Photo 4). The first test boards you make are unlikely to give you a perfect fit, so adjust the bit's height until the fit is just right.

Bay Brokers & Distributors Inc
850-785-1205
2210 West 23rd St Panama City, FL, 32405
Panama City, FL
Fastenal- Panama City
850-747-0089
1209 Harrison Ave Panama City, FL, 32401
Panama City, FL
Kmart 3355 / Cross Merch
(850) 769-2251
1329 W 15Th St
Panama City, FL
Southern Fastening Systems- Panama City Beach
850-235-3035
7512-B McElvey Panama City Beach, FL, 32408
Panama City Beach, FL
Flagala Hardware
850-234-2141
9700 Front Beach Rd
Panama City Beach, FL
Lowe's
(850) 913-1600
300 East 23Rd Street
Panama City, FL
LOWE'S OF PANAMA CITY, FLA.
850 913-1600
300 EAST 23RD ST. PANAMA CITY, FL, 32405
Panama City, FL
The Home Depot
(850)913-8860
409 23rd St East
Panama City, FL
Panama City Mall
(850) 872-2211
733 N Highway 231
Panama City, FL
Lowe's of Panama City Beach, FL
850-636-3920
11751 Panama City Beach Parkway Panama City Beach, FL, 32407
Panama City Beach, FL

Lock Rabbet Drawer Joinery

Lock Rabbet Drawer Joinery

Here's a router-made drawer joint that's quick, simple and self-aligning.

by Randy Johnson

For fast, easy, accurate joinery in everything from kitchen-cabinet drawers to jewelry boxes, the lock rabbet is the way to go. Lock rabbets are self-aligning and sufficiently strong for light- and medium-duty drawers. As with most woodworking techniques, there is more than one way to make a lock rabbet. We experimented with several methods using the tablesaw and router table and settled on this as our favorite. It uses a router bit called a drawer lock bit. And for the wood, we chose 1/2-in. Baltic birch plywood. Its multiple layers and lack of internal voids make it strong and stable.

Router Bit Setup

Setting up the drawer lock bit is not difficult. Start by aligning this bit with the fence, as shown in Photo 1. Next, adjust the height of the bit to approximately 3/8 in. (Photo 2). Run a couple of test boards (Photo 3) and check the fit (Photo 4). The first test boards you make are unlikely to give you a perfect fit, so adjust the bit's height until the fit is just right.

Marking the Drawer Sides

To determine the length of your drawer sides, subtract two times the thickness of the lip on your test board (Photo 4) from your final drawer box length. For example, if you're making a 12-in.-long drawer box and the lip on the test board is 1/16 in., the material for the drawer sides should be 11-7/8-in. long. Here's the math: 

1/16" x 2 = 1/8" 
12" - 1/8" = 11-7/8"

Prepare your plywood by cutting it into panels that equal the length you calculated with the formula above and are two to three drawer-sides wide (Photo 9). Add 1 in. to the width to allow for saw kerfs and edge waste. The edge waste will accommodate the chip-out that usually occurs when the router bit exits the cut. To rout the joint for drawer sides, hold the panel vertically against the fence (Photo 6).

Making the Drawer Box Fronts and Backs

Reset your router-table fence before you rout the fronts and backs. Set a scrap piece of your drawer-box material on top of the bit and move the fence back until the cutting depth matches the thickness of the material (Photo 7). Run a test cut with a scrap of drawer-box material and check the fit with the drawer side panels you cut earlier. It should look like the joint in (Photo 5). If the lip doesn't flush up with the side panel, readjust the router-table fence and run another test cut until the lip is flush with the side.

The drawer fronts and backs should be as long as the final width of the drawer box because they span the full width (Photo 5). These front and back panels are routed flat on the table (Photo 8)

Final Sizing

Now you can saw the drawer parts to final width (Photo 9). Then, saw or rout a 3/16-in.-deep dado in the parts for the drawer bottoms.

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