siggy_7
Full time tool collector, part time woodworker
I'm gearing up to build and fit a new kitchen. I've bought some full stave worktops (40mm thick, 80mm staves, 620mm wide) from Worktop Express which I think should look the business; when I went to visit their showroom I was quite taken with the way they had fitted the worktops around cookers and sinks. Rather than just leave the end grain exposed, they had a stave fitted across the end of the worktop like a breadboard end which looked really effective.
Question - how would you go about joining this? My first thought was biscuits (I've used these in the past to align worktops with a mason's mitre corner) but given the worktops are real wood and will expand differently due to the mixing of grain direction this didn't seem like a good idea. I'm currently thinking the way to go is a sliding dovetail with a spot of glue on the face side of the worktop, giving a bit of space at the back for differential expansion. All of the worktops will have a wall on the other edge, no island units or peninsulas. Or am I over-thinking this, and should I do something simpler? What size sliding dovetail should I be thinking of using? I have accurate horizontal and vertical router tables, so cutting the joints should be relatively straightforward.
Question - how would you go about joining this? My first thought was biscuits (I've used these in the past to align worktops with a mason's mitre corner) but given the worktops are real wood and will expand differently due to the mixing of grain direction this didn't seem like a good idea. I'm currently thinking the way to go is a sliding dovetail with a spot of glue on the face side of the worktop, giving a bit of space at the back for differential expansion. All of the worktops will have a wall on the other edge, no island units or peninsulas. Or am I over-thinking this, and should I do something simpler? What size sliding dovetail should I be thinking of using? I have accurate horizontal and vertical router tables, so cutting the joints should be relatively straightforward.