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  2. List of timber framing tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_timber_framing_tools

    A slick is a very large chisel designed to be pushed by hand, not struck. drills for boring holes in timber framing were typically T-auger. The cutting edge of the bit can be of many shapes, the spiral auger being the standard shape since the 19th century. Timber framers boring machines were invented by 1830 and hold an auger bit. They made ...

  3. Wood auger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_auger

    Study of a man using an auger, from The Seven Sorrows of the Virgin, by Albrecht Dürer, c. 1496. The classical design has a helical screw blade winding around the bottom end of the shaft. The lower edge of the blade is sharpened and scrapes the wood; the rest of the blade lifts the chips out of the way.

  4. Boring machine (carpentry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boring_machine_(carpentry)

    Before boring machines were invented, carpenters used hand-powered augers to bore holes. Most common were T-handled augers. The shape of the drill bits changed over time, with the spoon bit and shell bit being common before the invention of the spiral or twist bit in 1771 [1] which removes the cuttings as it turns. The exact origin of this ...

  5. Billhook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billhook

    The use of a billhook is between that of a knife and an axe. It is often used for cutting woody plants such as saplings and small branches, for hedging and for snedding (stripping the side shoots from a branch). [3] In France and Italy it is widely used for pruning grape vines.

  6. Gimlet (tool) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gimlet_(tool)

    A gimlet is a hand tool for drilling small holes, mainly in wood, without splitting. It was defined in Joseph Gwilt's Architecture (1859) as "a piece of steel of a semi-cylindrical form, hollow on one side, having a cross handle at one end and a worm or screw at the other".

  7. Bush carpentry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bush_carpentry

    Mann's Emigrant's Guide of 1849 suggests that those heading for Australia's unsettled areas take with them a plentiful supply of a wide variety of tools and fasteners, but he lists as the very minimum, 'A hand saw; Axe; Adze; Mortising chisel; Two augers, 1 and 1 1/4 inch; Two maul rings; [18] Set of wedges; 1 Spade; Pick-axe; Two-foot rule ...