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Definition of Dado plane
1. Noun. A plane for making a dado groove.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dado Plane
Literary usage of Dado plane
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Trade Foundations Based on Producing Industries (1919)
"In cutting grooves, or dadoes, across the grain of wood, a dado plane may ...
41 shows a dado plane in use. The stock is fastened on the bench and a strip ..."
2. The American House Carpenter: A Treatise on the Art of Building : Comprising by Robert Griffith Hatfield, O. P. Hatfield (1895)
"Upon the back of the string, with a ij-inch dado plane, make a succession of
grooves \\ inches apart, and parallel with the lines for the risers on the face ..."
3. The American House Carpenter: A Treatise on the Art of Building. Comprising by Robert Griffith Hatfield (1880)
"Upon the back of the string, with aI J-inch dado plane, make a succession of
grooves 1} inches apart, and parallel with the lines for the risers on the face ..."
4. Appletons' Cyclopædia of Applied Mechanics: A Dictionary of Mechanical by Appleton, firm, publishers, New York (1880)
"... as a dado plane of any width, by inserting the bit into the main stock and
bringing the sliding section up to the edge of the bit. ..."
5. Inspection of the Materials and Workmanship Employed in Construction: A by Austin Thomas Byrne (1898)
"DIAGONALS : Boards, etc., nailed on diagonally. DADO: A rectangular groove formed
in a board with a tool called a dado-plane (see Housing). ..."