Joint produced by lapping and joining two similar members.
A common term that can be applied to several different types of joints in which one piece of wood overlaps and fits onto or into another. As a rule, the surfaces of lap joints are usually flush when assembled.
A connection in which two pieces of material are overlapped before fastening.
In silverware, the technique used to join a spoon finial to the stem by cutting each piece in opposing L-shapes.
The joint formed when one member overlaps another. Home Improvement Encyclopedia
Wood joint where two boards are joined, each being cut to one half their normal thickness.
Joint where two pieces overlap each other.
A joint made by positioning one material over another end-to-end or side-by-side as opposed to a butt joint. The joint consists of two layers of material.
A joint formed with one member overlapping the other.
A joint made by overlapping two parts and bonding them together.
A woodworking joint where half the thickness of each piece is cut away to allow the pieces to lie flush after the joint is assembled.
A joint between two overlapping members in parallel plates.
A joint made by bonding overlapped portions of two adherends.
A joint made by placing one adherend partly over another and bonding together the overlapped portion.
the ends of both bars reduce to half thickness and a place one on top of the other so there is no increase of cross section in the joint area; usually in corners
Joint in construction achieved by overlapping ends of lumber for greater strength than simple butt joint.
A joint made by overlapping adjacent edge areas of two adherents to provide facing surfaces which can be joined with an adhesive.
A joint made by placing one member partly over another and bonding the overlapped portions.
the connection (joint) formed by overlapping two ends or edges and attaching them together
A welded joint in which two overlapping metal parts are joined by means of a fillet, plug or slot weld.
Property coated abrasives: a type of joint used to make a belt. The two ends of the belt material overlap and are attached with adhesives creating a joint with double thickness of the belt material.
A joint in which the component parts overlap so that the sealant or adhesive is placed into shear action.
A boomerang created by joining two separately-constructed wings at the elbow. Primarily used for aesthetic reasons.
A method of attaching two pieces of wood. Half the thickness is removed - using a table saw or router - from both pieces so the joint will be the same thickness as the original stock.
joint between two members in which end or edge of one is partly cut away to be overlapped by end or edge of the other, resulting in a flush surface.
A joint in which two conductors are joined by placing them side-by-side so they overlap. Also called parallel splice.
A joint made by overlapping two ends and joining them together.
Two boards that overlap one another but are nailed together where they overlap.
In woodworking, or metal fitting, a lap joint describes a technique for joining two pieces of material by overlapping them. A lap may be a full lap or half lap.