hellobadger
Member
Hi everyone,
I've recently completed a dining table. It's a large solid piece of Elm with epoxy resin filling any voids. I know that some people don't like epoxy tables but I do and I also believe it was the best use of this particular piece of wood. As you can see from the pictures, some cracks (currently about 1mm wide) have started to develop at one end of the table. They are on the top, the edge and the underside. The table was completed and finished with Rubio Monocoat approx 1 month ago.
The question is - what to do about it? Should I just wait and see how much these cracks develop and maybe just fill them if it 'stabilises'? Or, should I act now and add some butterfly joints to try and stop the cracks getting bigger?
I think I know why this has happened:
- I started with a very thick slab, approx 70mm and brought it down to 50mm. This fresh wood is probably the reason for the movement if it had trapped moisture in it?
- The steel framed table base and 'c-channel' steels allow no movement whatsoever.
- Perhaps the damn thing just wasn't dry enough. I did check it with a moisture meter and it seemed ok, but that was before I removed 20mm of thickness.
Any advice really appreciated.
Andy
I've recently completed a dining table. It's a large solid piece of Elm with epoxy resin filling any voids. I know that some people don't like epoxy tables but I do and I also believe it was the best use of this particular piece of wood. As you can see from the pictures, some cracks (currently about 1mm wide) have started to develop at one end of the table. They are on the top, the edge and the underside. The table was completed and finished with Rubio Monocoat approx 1 month ago.
The question is - what to do about it? Should I just wait and see how much these cracks develop and maybe just fill them if it 'stabilises'? Or, should I act now and add some butterfly joints to try and stop the cracks getting bigger?
I think I know why this has happened:
- I started with a very thick slab, approx 70mm and brought it down to 50mm. This fresh wood is probably the reason for the movement if it had trapped moisture in it?
- The steel framed table base and 'c-channel' steels allow no movement whatsoever.
- Perhaps the damn thing just wasn't dry enough. I did check it with a moisture meter and it seemed ok, but that was before I removed 20mm of thickness.
Any advice really appreciated.
Andy