Butt joining 9 mm plywood

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chippy1970

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Just got myself a ply lining kit for my T5 van but the floor is in two sections split down the centre. Its 9mm WBP pretty good quality but I want to make the join a proper joint. I was thinking of running a 4mm groove with my biscuit cutter and use a long 4mm strip of ply as a loose tongue. Only trouble I see with this is there will only be 2.5mm of ply left either side of the tongue this may be weak I dont know.

When its dry out there I will take a proper look I may have room to just put a ply strap screwed to the under side of the joint.

Any other ideas ????

Cheers
 
Yes, but if you glue the ply tongue into the groove, its effectively back to being 9mm ply again. I'd have thought it would be OK

Ed
 
EdSutton":51ehoelp said:
Yes, but if you glue the ply tongue into the groove, its effectively back to being 9mm ply again. I'd have thought it would be OK

Ed

Exactly what I was thinking cheers.
 
One thing to watch out for, ChippyJoe, is that two sheets of 9mm ply may be different thicknesses.

I have just had this problem making a mold that had to be terribly accurate. The two sheets of 15mm ply (picked from the same pile at the same time!) were almost 1mm different in thickness, which was a real nuisance. You have to work from the reference face, in normal woodworking manner, but then it will mean that there could be a hump on the underside.

You'd obviously have to set you biscuit cutter to a very shallow depth, and would be relying on keeping it very steady as you moved it over the work. I would use a PU glue, so that any minor gaps were filled.

Mike
 
As Mike suggests, I would use PU glue, principally for its slippery qualities not its gap filling qualities (and which are only cosmetic in any case). Glueing in a very long strip of ply into a groove could prove difficult with normal PVA glue which has a tendency to "grab" quickly.
 
Mike Garnham":36cwagx6 said:
One thing to watch out for, ChippyJoe, is that two sheets of 9mm ply may be different thicknesses.

Mike

Yeah I thought PU glue would be a good idea, just been up the workshop and had a look and they are exactly 9mm both sides of the joint so no problems but I know what you mean I had that problem with some MDF awhile back it was about 1.5 mm thicker.

PS Mike who's Chippy Joe ? :lol: :lol: I'm Chippy Chris :wink:
 
Just an idle question, but why are you bothering to joint it. Most coachbuilders etc would use one of the adhesive/sealers from Sikaflex. I would use FC40 from O'Learys. This would allow for any differences in thickness and a slight degree of movement if the floor became damp/dry. I tried PU adhesive and biscuit joints on two 12mm sheets for a van bulkhead and found it very difficult to clamp and keep flat with the kit I had available.

Tony Comber
 
chippy1970":26559xqw said:
PS Mike who's Chippy Joe ? :lol: :lol: I'm Chippy Chris :wink:

Oooops, sorry!!

I posted a reply without using the quote button, so I didn't have your name in front of me when I was typing. I obviously have the memory of a goldfish.....

Mike
 
shipbadger":312xp26t said:
Just an idle question, but why are you bothering to joint it. Most coachbuilders etc would use one of the adhesive/sealers from Sikaflex. I would use FC40 from O'Learys. This would allow for any differences in thickness and a slight degree of movement if the floor became damp/dry. I tried PU adhesive and biscuit joints on two 12mm sheets for a van bulkhead and found it very difficult to clamp and keep flat with the kit I had available.

Tony Comber

Yeah its only a thought at this time I wont fit it until the weekend. I have used Sikaflex before for laying a solid oak floor great stuff. I was just going to fix the ply down with the six lashing points. I can swap the lashing points for 40mm m10 countersunk socket screws and screw down into the existing threaded holes. I suppose the odd dab of Sikaflex would help.

Heres a video of something similar http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vp7X5tmxkSU
 
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