David Tyler wrote:
...pending further information and thoughts from anyone who has used puzzle joints. I've retained the all-scarphs drawing.
I've built a few of the CLC craft, and we are building their Teardrop Camper right now, believe it or not - my first kit ever, and therefore my first puzzle joint panels. The panels in place do have some good bends and twists. Nothing like the bow of my Core Sound 17, which was designed by the Graham Byrnes that David cites below of B&B Yacht Designs, but a fair amount good 3D shape develops. Incidentally, the CS17 didn't use scarfs: the panels are carefully butt jointed with glass tape on both sides, all the panels in one shot in big stack screwed right through to keep them from moving during setup. They've never had a failure if done by spec. Concerns about the strength of the puzzle joints may be like worries about whether nuclear fusion or fission is a faster way to boil water for tea.
I haven't done destructive testing, but boy the puzzle joint seems strong if glassed on both sides - even just one side is impressive. The fit is tremendously close, nearly idiot proof even. It also forces any crack propagation along the join into a circuitous route that takes it across 90 degrees plus of turn, forcing its way through glass fibers sometimes running with the weave, others with the weft, and often 45 degrees to them both. Not that we want any crack to start, of course, but propagation is quite frustrated.
Like I said, I haven't destroyed any of them, but I am pretty sure that when twisted or bent it would break outside the joint. If I were planning on using them in a design of my own, I'd keep them in flatter runs just like any other joint in order to keep the changing properties of the wood from ruining a fair turn.
Visually... meh. It looks a bit too mechanical for my tastes, but that's only an issue if finishing bright anyway.