Staves and Segments

Staved or segmented construction figures in a lot of projects, from 
ornamental bowl turnings to porch pillars. A question we often hear is: 
What miter angle (or bevel) do I need? Another recurring question is: 
How long (or wide) should I make the pieces? Finding those answers is 
relatively easy. Here s how to do the math.

First, let's get our terminology straight. Staved cylinders and 
segmented rings may seem alike, but they're two different breeds of 
cats. As shown in the Staved Cylinder and Segmented Ring illustrations, 
the individual pieces in a segmented ring are miter-cut (shown in the 
Segment illustration) and joined at the ends. In a staved cylinder, the 
component parts are bevel-cut (shown in the Stave illustration) and 
joined edge-to-edge.



So, things can become confusing when we start talking about the distance 
between the angles. On a stave that distance is the width, but on a 
segment, it's the length. For this article, we'll refer always to 
length. Substitute "width" if you're cutting staves.

Also for simplicity, we'll call the angled cuts miters, even though we 
know they may be either miters or bevels. Note, too, that this article 
only covers straight-sided cylinders or flat rings. Tapered cylinders or 
rings with sloped sides call for compound cuts.

What's Your Angle?
Corner and miter angles for
various numbers of sides
no. of sides corner miter
6 60° 30°
8 45° 22-1/2°
10 36° 18°
12 30° 15°
16 22-1/2° 11-1/4°



What's your angle?
A full circle contains 360 degrees. So, to make a closed construction 
out of straight pieces, the corner angles must add up to 360 degrees. In 
the simple figure with six equal-length sides shown in the Corner and 
Miter Angle illustration below, the six 60 degree corners add up to 360 
degrees.

But, as shown, 60 degrees is not the angle you need to cut on the ends 
of each piece. Because two sides come together to make the angle, each 
side must be miter-cut to exactly half the total corner angle, or 30 
degrees.

Here's the rule for finding the angle: To determine the corner angle for 
a figure with any number of equal-length sides, divide 360 degrees by 
the number of sides. To find the miter angle, divide the corner angle by 
two.

How Big Will It Be?

To figure out the measurement across the assembled construction, shown 
as D1 in the Assembled Size illustration, multiply the side length (L) 
times the inside-diameter factor for the appropriate number of sides 
from the chart below. This dimension, which is the diameter of the 
largest circle that can be drawn inside the outline of the glue-up, also 
represents the diameter of the largest round piece that could be sawn or 
turned from the assembled ring.

You can calculate the width across the points, shown as D2, by 
multiplying the side length times the outside-diameter factor.




FACTOR TO FIND DIAMETER
no. of
sides  Diameter
inside (D1) outside (D2)
6 1.73205 2
8 2.41421 2.61313
10 3.07768 3.23607
12 3.73205 3.86370
16 5.02734 5.12583


And if you need to know the diameter of the opening in a ring, shown as 
D3, just multiply the length of the short edge of the segment (IL) by 
the appropriate inside-diameter factor.

You can work backwards, too, to find the stave length required to 
produce a given diameter. In this case, divide the desired diameter by 
the factor from the chart. To find, for instance, the side length for a 
hexagon that measures 24" across (D1), divide 24" by the inside-diameter 
factor (1.73205). Doing this gives us 13.85641", or 13-55/64".

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