Molynoox
Established Member
Hi All,
I am nearly finished with my chopping board project but I have reached the part I was worried about - it's not going to plan.
This was it two days ago but its gone backwards since then
The curved inlays are problematic, the pic above is a dry fit where I tried to pre-stress the inlays overnight by clamping them in the board. After a day they just sprung back to mostly where they were before, and some of the strips were cracking a bit.
Here is an example of one of the strips for the inlays, they are about 2mm thick:
Here is me doing an attempted glue up yesterday:
Here it is a little later after I aborted the mission:
I aborted when I went to check on it after an hour - I noticed that the board was not sitting flat because the clamping pressure was distorting it. I decided I didn't want that so pulled it apart and stripped off the glue and now I am back to where I was.
I did try steaming the strips before doing the pre-stressing so that it needed less clamping pressure but this seemed to cause the glue joints to fail on the strips.
So it solved one problem but created another.
ADVICE NEEDED
Should I have another go at steaming and if so how do I stop the glue joints failing?
Should I just have another go with same method (without steaming) but try and prevent the board from curving under pressure?
Am I doing something fundamentally wrong?
I really wanted to soften up the strips before clamping for two big reasons:
-reduce clamping pressure to avoid distortion
-to get a more snug fit between the strips and the board (even with mega pressure it didn't seem to be closing up perfectly - I think the curves are tricky in this respect)
Martin
I am nearly finished with my chopping board project but I have reached the part I was worried about - it's not going to plan.
This was it two days ago but its gone backwards since then
The curved inlays are problematic, the pic above is a dry fit where I tried to pre-stress the inlays overnight by clamping them in the board. After a day they just sprung back to mostly where they were before, and some of the strips were cracking a bit.
Here is an example of one of the strips for the inlays, they are about 2mm thick:
Here is me doing an attempted glue up yesterday:
Here it is a little later after I aborted the mission:
I aborted when I went to check on it after an hour - I noticed that the board was not sitting flat because the clamping pressure was distorting it. I decided I didn't want that so pulled it apart and stripped off the glue and now I am back to where I was.
I did try steaming the strips before doing the pre-stressing so that it needed less clamping pressure but this seemed to cause the glue joints to fail on the strips.
So it solved one problem but created another.
ADVICE NEEDED
Should I have another go at steaming and if so how do I stop the glue joints failing?
Should I just have another go with same method (without steaming) but try and prevent the board from curving under pressure?
Am I doing something fundamentally wrong?
I really wanted to soften up the strips before clamping for two big reasons:
-reduce clamping pressure to avoid distortion
-to get a more snug fit between the strips and the board (even with mega pressure it didn't seem to be closing up perfectly - I think the curves are tricky in this respect)
Martin