A joint made in a rubber part before or after vulcanization by placing the two pieces to be joined edge-to-edge.
Joint made with the two ends cut at right angles to the length of material.
(r) a connection made with two ends cut at right angles.(sc) This term is generally associated with the semiconductor industry. This term is generally associated with the rubber industry.
Application and Use Joint in which the plane of the bond is at right angles to a major axis of the adherends.
The junction where the ends of building materials meet. To place materials end-to-end or end-to-edge without overlapping.
Where two edges touch without overlapping. Calico: A plain white cotton fabric that is heavier than muslin.
Where two separate, adjacent pieces of material abut.
A square cut joint where two members meet. The place where any two pieces of material meet.
Wood joint where the end of one board is butted or glued directly to the second board.
Placing two tiles together closely as to create the smallest grout joint as possible.
A joint made by positioning materials together end-to-end or side-to-side without an overlap.
A joint where two separate sections of material abut.
a joint made by fastening ends together without overlapping
a joint formed by square edge surfaces (e
a joint where the edges of two pieces of wood are placed against each other
a joint where two non-recessed edges meet as shown below
a simple joint, consisting of one piece of wood butted up against another
Point where two pieces of wood or molding join.
Where the ends of boards meet together in a wood floor.
An external corner formed with the meeting of two square-edged stones, either one overlapping the other.
a type of joint used to make a belt. The two ends of the belt material butt up to each other and are attached with tape.
The point at which two logs on the same course join end-to-end.
Joint where two boards are glued edge to edge or face to edge without overlapping.
A splice or connection formed by placing the ends of two conductors together and joining them by welding, brazing or soldering.
The point within the joint treatment where two or more lengths of a joint system or a joint system component material are joined.
Fastening together of two shorter logs end to end to create a longer timber that will span the length of a wall.
The junction where the ends of two timbers or other members meet in a square-cut joint.
A joint between two members aligned approximately in the same plane.
A joint in which parts are joined with no overlap.
A solder joint where the end of the lead sits on the solder pad.
A term used when the edges of two pieces of wood are joined together.
A joint on which the squared end of one member is butted against the side or the end of another member.
Joint formed by butting the ends of two pieces of wood together. Usually attached by glue or staples or both.
The connection of two pieces of wood or other types of materials that meet in a square-cut joint.
Joint formed by square edge surfaces (ends, edges, faces) coming together.
A joint made by fastening pieces together without overlapping.
Joint in carpentry achieved by nailing and gluing square ends of lumber together.
A butt joint is typified by two pieces of wood meeting at right angles where it is most often glued. While appearing to be tight, the joint is not as strong as many others and is not used extensively on fine furniture.
The interface at which the ends of two members or other members meet in a square cut joint. BODY { SCROLLBAR-FACE-COLOR: #cc0000; SCROLLBAR-3DLIGHT-COLOR: #ffffff; SCROLLBAR-ARROW-COLOR: #dbdbca; SCROLLBAR-DARKSHADOW-COLOR: #ffffff; SCROLLBAR-BASE-COLOR: #dbdbca
A joint between two pieces of wood where one piece simply "butts" onto the end of the other (as opposed to a Mitre or dovetail joint).
A simple joint where two pieces of wood are fixed together with no interlocking parts cut in them. Cam and stud fixing - A simple fixing used in flat-pack construction.
A joint or seam formed by joining separate sections of a membrane at the edge without overlapping (i.e. edge to edge). Once the edges have been joined the seam is usually covered and sealed with a narrow strip of membrane material or compatible tape.
The junction of the ends of two pieces of wood such as on a sill.
A plain square joint between two members
Lumber pieces joined at the ends.
Joining point of two pieces of wood or molding.
A straight joint in which the interface is perpendicular to the panel face. An end butt joint is perpendicular to the grain.
is the where two pieces of wood or molding are joined at a point.
A simple glue joint between two surfaces, joined with no overlap, tenons, or shoulders. [Home] [--] [A-to-Z
A joint in which the structural units are joined to place the adhesive or sealant into tension or compression.
The point where two pieces of wood or molding are joined. The ends meet but do not overlap.
THE JOINING OF TWO BUILDING MATERIALS AT A FLAT EDGE. USUALLY APPLIES TO FRAMING MEMBERS, SHEET ROCK, MOULDING, OR DECKING.
A joint made by fastening two logs together without overlap. The two members are square cut and joined at the flat surface.
A woodworking joint where the edges of two boards are placed against each other.
a joint formed by adjacent, separate sections of material, such as where two neighboring pieces of insulation abut.
A right angle created without mitering by joining the squared end of one piece of wood to the side or end of another piece of wood.
A butt joint is a joinery technique in which two members are joined by simply butting them together. The butt joint is the simplest joint to make since it merely involves cutting the members to the appropriate length and butting them together. It is also the weakest because unless some form of reinforcement is used (see below) it relies upon glue alone to hold it together.