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Kai-no-kuchi Splicing Joint

Kai-no-kuchi joint halves

Hey folks. It’s been a busy few weeks with lots of time being devoted to prep for an upcoming craft fair, among other life things, but I still have some pictures to share from the joinery models I made a while back, and next up is the kai-no-kuchi splicing joint (貝の口継ぎ).

I really like this splicing joint. Compared to others which can get pretty complex, the individual parts of this joint are pretty simple, and both halves are identical. That said the contact areas on this joint are really broad, which makes getting a clean fit with tight seams a challenge.

After milling the stock and cutting the two halves to length the first order of business was layout. Here’s the stub tenon layout on the end of both halves.

kai-no-kuchi end grain layout

From there I roughed out the stub tenons using a trimmer.

kai-no-kuchi stub tenon after routing
routing kai-no-kuchi stub tenon

Then moved on to cleaning things up with a chisel, which was all the work required on this end of the joint. Pretty straightforward.

kai-no-kuchi stub tenon after chisel work

The next phase involved cutting away a massive amount of material from the faces adjacent to the stub tenons. Here I’m roughing out the cut using a hand saw.

handsawing kai-no-kuchi joint
kai-no-kuchi hand saw kerf
both halves of kai-no-kuchi after hand sawing

Then I used a forstner style drill to hog out most of the waste material.

drilling out the waste on kai-no-kuchi joint
preparing for chisel work after drilling

Followed by some chisel work to clean up things up.

Chiselling out the waste on kai-no-kuchi joint
kai-no-kuchi joint after chiselling out the waste

When all is said and done you end up with parts that look like this.

Kai-no-kuchi joint halves

The next bit of work requires cutting a set of grooves on the inner end grain portions of the areas I just cut out. Those grooves will receive the stub tenons cut at the very beginning. Before laying out the grooves I cleaned up the end grain using a chisel and paring block.

cleaning the inner shoulder joint on kai-no-kuchi

After cleaning up the end grain I couldn’t resist doing a quick test fit to see how the two halves were going to fit. If all the layout and cutout goes well the joint should slide together with the stub tenons bottoming out on the end grain portions of the joint from the previous photo.

test fit of first kai-no-kuchi joint

But that’s when I noticed some trouble in the form of a crack developing in one half of the joint. I think the cherry I was using here either wasn’t fully dry/acclimated to my shop, or it had some serious tension in the grain… or perhaps a combination of the two.

split that developed on first kai-no-kuchi joint

Once I noticed this crack I started looking around at some of the other joints I had cut from this material and started to notice other cracks developing, which was a bummer. After mulling it over a bit I decided to abandon this joinery model and start over from scratch using some different cherry that had been sitting around in my shop for a long time… and therefore hopefully more dry and stable.

So here we go for round 2.

kai-no-kuchi joint round two

I fully intended to show the cutout process on joint #2, including the cutout of the grooves to receive the stub tenons but accidentally deleted the photos from my camera before loading them onto my computer… another fail from this project. So my apologies for the lack of detail shots showing the full process.

In any case here’s one half of joint #2 after all the cutout was complete. You can see the sumi ink transfer marks from the other half which show where the two halves are rubbing. Like the other joints from this series, I needed to make the fit between the two halves loose enough that a person handling the joint could easily disassemble it. So once again the challenge was to remove just enough material to allow the joint to be somewhat loose, while trying to keep the seams as gap free as possible.

sumi marks for fine tuning the fit

I used a chisel to very carefully and slowly remove material from the areas marked by the sumi ink.

sumi marks for fine tuning the fit on kai-no-kuchi joint

Here’s a look at the two halves of the joint going together.

kai-no-kuchi joint halves at start of assembly

You can see by this point the main contact areas were just on the outer edges along the inside faces of the joint. I was most hesitant about removing material along the edges for fear that the seams would become gappy.

kai-no-kuchi joint going together
kai-no-kuchi joint almost closed

Here you can see the joint further along in assembly and the interaction between the stub tenons and mating grooves.

kai-no-kuchi joint stub tenon detail
kai-no-kuchi joint stub tenons engaged

And here it is all together. All finish planed and coated with a coat of liquid glass finish.

kai-no-kuchi joint closed

Here’s another version of this joint that I previously made just for the fun of it where the stub tenons are blind. I really like the look of this version, it’s much cleaner looking when the two halves of the joint are assembled. Cutting the stub tenons for this style is no big deal, but cutting the mating blind mortise/grooves is much harder.

inside of kai-no-kuchi with blind stub tenons
kai-no-kuchi with blind stub tenons inner workings
assembling kai-no-kuchi with blind stub tenons
kai-no-kuchi with blind stub tenons

That’s it for this round of joinery models. I’ve got one more after this to share and that should wrap things up for now.

Thanks for reading.

9 thoughts on “Kai-no-kuchi Splicing Joint”

  1. Super, comme d’habitude… Je ne sais pas si je serais réaliser cela ???
    En tous les cas, MERCI pour ce partage.
    Luc

  2. That’s a beautiful joint. Really appreciate you showing when things don’t go to plan too. I’d love to see how you use the ink to finesse the fit

  3. OK, I have no reason to use that joint but now I want to make one anyway. Would that be used on a vertical post, or on a horizontal beam? Either?

    1. Yeah it’s a really cool joint, and tempting to search for places to put it to use. For carpentry it’s only used vertically, since it doesn’t have a ton of strength against lateral forces.

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