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            On those fancy teak and mahogany trimmed millionaire boats  you see at boat shows and on the covers of the   glossy magazines, there is not a screw head to be seen. Vast expanses of  varnished and oiled wood and not a blemish.   You KNOW that there  must be  fastenings in there,  but nothing shows. 
             Its only when you look closely that you see tiny circles  regularly spaced along the trim, faint but fitting perfectly and so much a part  of the beautifully fitted woodwork that they look almost as though they have  grown there. 
            Plugs, or bungs.  Here  is the story of how you make and fit them. 
            
            First, they must be sharp.   Buying new they will be ready to use, but teak and some other woods will  take the edge off very quickly.   Somewhere near you there will be a service that sharpens saws, router  bits, engineering mill bits and such.  If  you cant find them phone a company that makes kitchen cabinetwork and ask who  services their tools. 
            Given a sharp plug cutter, the second thing you need to  know, is that you must use a drill press, you cannot use a hand held drill, the  cuts must be precise and perfectly clean and you wont get that with a hand held  drill. 
            Select an offcut of wood from the wood that you will be  fastening, take care to match the colour and the grain.  Note that the grain needs to be as close as  you can  get to the workpiece in every  respect, angle to the surface, the orientation,   and the appearance.  That piece can be anywhere from an inch wide to maybe three  inches according to the saw that you will use to “free” the plugs.  It should be about twice as thick as the  depth of the plugs you are planning to cut.            For most work, I cut my plugs from a 1in x 2in piece. 
            Set the depth gauge on the drill press to slightly more than  the diameter of the plug that you will cut. If the  tool has no depth gauge then get a sharpie  marker and put a black line around it, this will show up clearly when the drill  press is running. 
            Ensure that the depth that you are cutting to leaves a clear  space above the plug surface, you don’t want it to jam in there. 
            Set the drill press speed on medium slow, maybe 400 rpm for  half inch plugs, 600 rpm for 3/8in. 
            It helps if you have a drill press vice, but if you have a  long piece it can be held with care.   I  have a piece of steel angle I’ve drilled so I can bolt it to the drill press  table set so that the wood that you are going to cut can slide along nicely so  you can drill a series of plugs one after the other.  This “fence” can be moved to suit the width  of the wood and where you are going to place the next line of plugs. 
            Drill those holes, one  after the other. Note that the plug STAYS IN THE WOOD. It DOES NOT come out  until the next process. 
            Make multiple rows of holes, as many rows as the width of  the wood allows.  Always cut some spares,  you can bet on some wastage. I make about 20% more than I think I’ll need. 
            Got enough cut? Plus spares?  
            Take the piece over   to your table saw, or bandsaw.   Set the fence to give you a width where the cut will just clip the  bottom of the plug as you rip along the length of the wood piece, this cut  cleanly frees the plugs from the wood piece. It will though spit the detatched  plug out sideways away from the blade so have a small box sitting alongside the  cut to collect them. 
            Some plug cutters, when cutting at the correct depth will  produce a slight taper on the end of the plug, when you go to use them that is  of course the end that you push in first.  
            Next, the holes.   Drill bits come in many different configurations, the one you want for  this is a true woodworking bit that has a “scriber” or “wing” on the outer edge  of each cutting edge and a spike in the middle. 
            Use a drill with a depth gauge or mark the depth with  masking tape or a sharpie, that depth should have about 2/3 of the plug  diameter in there above the surface of the screw head. That may take a couple  of experimental holes to get right. 
            Note that the brad point drill is only used to make the part  of the hole that takes the plug, when that’s drilled you then need to drill the  pilot hole and countersink the bottom of that hole.  Take care doing this, a conventional wood  screw has a shank that is the same diameter of the outside of the thread at its  largest. So the pilot hole should be two diameters, one for the shank, one for  the thread. 
            Aside a little, these are intended to allow the two pieces  to pull together and still very positively locate both pieces relative to each other,  something that a screw that is threaded right up to the head may not do. 
              In either case, there are three different diameters of hole  to drill plus the bottom of the hole for the plug should ideally be angled (same as a countersink) to take the underside of the countersunk head screw. 
            Some plug cutter sets are sold with matching drill bits, and  this is the ideal way to do it, but if not, the drill should produce a hole  that is a firm press fit for the plug. Not too tight, and not, too sloppy.  
            With glue applied and the wood in place, the screw driven and everything in place, the  plugs can be left until all the glue is set.   Do though make sure that there is not glue crept up into the holes for  the plugs, once set its near impossible to get that cleaned out without messing  up the hole. Whatever kind of glue you  choose, it should be clear when set. 
            
              
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                Turning  the plugs - a drill press required | 
               
              
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                Cutting them free - watch those fingers! | 
               
              
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                Pressing home - make sure the grain is right | 
               
              
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                Trimming - make sure that chisel is sharp. | 
               
             
            Teak is a problem, it’s a very oily wood and ideally should be  degreased with mekp or acetone just before glueing.   But almost all of the other wood species  should glue easily. 
            I use epoxy for most plugs, sometimes a transparent  Aliphatic pva of which there are many  brands.  One of the better known is Titebond  III, but most manufacturers of adhesives make something similar. 
            It is easy to put too much glue in the hole,  I prefer to coat the sides of the plug, not  the bottom, then press the plug in firmly.    The screw head will be left clean in case of a need to undo it in  future, plus there is no glue in the bottom to prevent the plug from going in  full depth,  excess glue will be squeezed  out.   
            When driving the plug, the grain orientation is a  consideration.  In structural bungs such  as below the waterline in a carvel planked boat the grain should be at right  angles to the grain of the plank. That’s to reduce the chance of the plug  expanding across its grain splitting the plank. But for decorative work the grain of the plug should be  lined up with the grain of the wood being plugged. 
            Back to the setup on the drill press.  Its not easy to line the grain up when  dealing with such small pieces, so if this is going to be an issue it will help  to put a fine line along the wood centred on the line of plugs to be cut. This  line is used to indicate the grain direction when fitting. 
            Back to driving the plug in. Don’t hit it with a hammer, that  compresses the plug of wood, I press it in with the back of a chisel blade,  just firm hand pressure.
              It will seat with the plug top clear of the surface of the  wood being plugged. 
            Let it set off then shave it down close to the surface but  still a fraction proud with a very sharp chisel with a low angle bevel.  Take care not to chip it below the surface of  the wood, that’s easily done. The final levelling off can be done with a fine  sander and then if you are really looking for perfection a cabinet scraper will  give it the final finish. 
            All this sounds like a long and tedious process, and for one  or two it is,  but for a line of  a couple of dozen its quite quick, and the result  on a bright finished surface is both professional and good looking. 
            John Welsford  |