My in-laws live in a German fachwerk timber framed house, built in the Viking long-hall style of Lower Saxony, and I'm quite familiar with the multiplicity of styles found around Germany. Many other countries have similar timber framed buildings, with a lot of variety of forms but constructed using very similar techniques - and until recently, every traditional timber framed building I had seen was build using mortice and tenon joints - that is, a tongue in one beam fitting into a slot in another, pulled together by a peg driven through slightly off-set holes.
However, I recently stayed in an alpine chalet in France, and although the structure was very similar to other timber-framed buildings, it was constructed almost entirely using a kind of pegged halving dovetail joint - that is, a wedge-shape was cut into the end of each horizontal, and a corresponding notch cut in the side of the verticals - a peg then went squarely through the middle of each joint. This meant that each horizontal beam didn't sit in the middle of each vertical, but was instead offset to the side. However, it got me thinking.
Firstly I couldn't see why this joint was favoured over the mortice and tenon joint I usually see. Was it perhaps because the construction was of softwood rather than hardwood? Secondly, it made me wonder why the mortice and tenon joint is usually favoured - perhaps because it's easier to work with green wood when using hardwoods, and a mortice and tenon joint would tolerate movement and shrinkage?
However, I recently stayed in an alpine chalet in France, and although the structure was very similar to other timber-framed buildings, it was constructed almost entirely using a kind of pegged halving dovetail joint - that is, a wedge-shape was cut into the end of each horizontal, and a corresponding notch cut in the side of the verticals - a peg then went squarely through the middle of each joint. This meant that each horizontal beam didn't sit in the middle of each vertical, but was instead offset to the side. However, it got me thinking.
Firstly I couldn't see why this joint was favoured over the mortice and tenon joint I usually see. Was it perhaps because the construction was of softwood rather than hardwood? Secondly, it made me wonder why the mortice and tenon joint is usually favoured - perhaps because it's easier to work with green wood when using hardwoods, and a mortice and tenon joint would tolerate movement and shrinkage?