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  2. Peg wood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peg_wood

    A peg wood (also pegwood) is a cleaning tool used in watchmaking [1] to clean pivot and other small holes. Pegwood is made from a specially selected orangewood that has been dried and sheds very little. A peg wood consists of a thin piece or dowel of wood that the user shapes to be pointed.

  3. Treenail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treenail

    A treenail, also trenail, trennel, or trunnel, is a wooden peg, pin, or dowel used to fasten pieces of wood together, especially in timber frames, covered bridges, wooden shipbuilding and boat building. [1] It is driven into a hole bored through two (or more) pieces of structural wood (mortise and tenon).

  4. Tuning mechanisms for stringed instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuning_mechanisms_for...

    The middle section, which would pass through the wood, is tapered. A variety of methods are used to tune different stringed instruments. Most change the pitch produced when the string is played by adjusting the tension of the strings. A tuning peg in a pegbox is perhaps the most common system. A peg has a grip or knob on it to allow it to be ...

  5. Nail (fastener) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nail_(fastener)

    In woodworking and construction, a nail is a small object made of metal (or wood, called a tree nail or "trunnel") which is used as a fastener, as a peg to hang something, or sometimes as a decoration. [1] Generally, nails have a sharp point on one end and a flattened head on the other, but headless nails are available.

  6. Conservation and restoration of waterlogged wood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservation_and...

    Identical to PEG treatment process but sucrose is used instead of PEG solution. The cells of the wood are replaced by sucrose, rather than water. Originally recommended as a low-cost method for treating waterlogged wood, sucrose treatments are inconsistent in how much shrinkage they prevent, especially for severely degraded wood. [12]

  7. Timber framing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timber_framing

    Joints in a pre-modern French roof; the wooden pegs hold the mortise and tenon joinery together. Projecting ("jettied") upper storeys of an English half-timbered village terraced house, the jetties plainly visible This is a part of a timber frame, before pegs are inserted.