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Sawhorse

Structure for supporting lumber workpieces during sawing

Sawhorse

Summary

Structure for supporting lumber workpieces during sawing

A sawhorse (gray shaded structure)
Plastic folding sawhorses
Lightweight, stack-able, saw horses from the book Agricultural Woodworking: a group of problems for rural and graded schools ... by [[Louis Michael Roehl]] (1916)

In woodworking, a saw-horse or sawhorse (saw-buck, trestle, buck) is a trestle structure used to support a board or plank for sawing. A pair of sawhorses can support a plank, forming a scaffold. In certain circles, it is also known as a mule and a short sawhorse is known as a pony. The names come from the shape of the frame, which resembles a horse. A sawhorse may also be a rack for supporting logs for sawing, known in the US as a sawbuck.

The sawhorse may be designed to fold for storage. A sawhorse with a wide top is particularly useful to support a board for sawing or as a field workbench, and is more useful as a single, but also more difficult to store.

A sawhorse can also be used as the base for a portable workbench by placing a sheet of plywood or even a door across two sawhorses. If the sawhorses are strong enough, the portable table can be used as a platform for tools like a table saw, although with caution if the top is not secured to the sawhorses.

In boatmaking, the curved nature of the cross-beam, designed to support the timbers used for hulls led to the colloquial name of sea-horse, this term, derived from old Norse, entered the Northumbrian dialect, it is thought, through Norwegian settlers as early as the 14th century.

History

Modern sawhorses are usually made of dimensional lumber, but the basic form of the sawhorse has remained unchanged for centuries. For example, one of the illustrations in De Re Metallica (1556) contains a drawing of a millwright using a pair of sawhorses to support the beams he is forming. The top of each of these sawhorses appears to be made from a halved log, with legs mortised or dovetailed into place.

Crowd control

A device for crowd control in the 20th century had the shape of a sawhorse made of wood. The legs are similar but rather heavy duty facsimiles of the hobby version of about the same height. The horizontal bar consists of a heavy-duty plank about 14 ft long with printed on it in large letters: Police Line - Do Not Cross. Many cities have chosen to replace this wooden barrier with the French barrier, which is a metal crowd control device.

References

References

  1. Oxford English Dictionary Second Edition on CD-ROM (v. 4.0), Oxford University Press 2009. Saw, n. 1., Sawbuck, Buck n. 1.
  2. "How to Build Sawhorses: Simple DIY Woodworking Project". Hearst Communication, Inc..
  3. The Small Wood Shop: The Best of Fine Woodworking. Newtown: The Taunton Press, 1993. 24. {{ISBN. 1561580619
  4. Georgius Agricola, ''De Re Metallica'', Basel, 1556. Illustration appears on [https://archive.org/stream/deremetallica50agri#page/285/mode/1up page 285] of Herbert and Lou Henry Hoover, [https://archive.org/stream/deremetallica50agri#page/n4/mode/1up De Re Metallica], Dover Publications, New York, 1950.
  5. Baker, Al. (29 June 2007). "Barriers Held Against Beatlemania, but Not March of Progress". New York Times.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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