Confusion On Fixing Edging To Workbench.
The workbench I'm making to learn various skills on see,
http://www.instructables.com/id/Buildin ... workbench/
I'm in a bit of a conundrum, the 40mm solid Beech worktop I bought as a top was £70 and having two big sheets of 19mm MDF cut was another 40 odd. So I'm £110+ in so far, with just these and feel committed to carry on.According to the designers plans the two 19mm MDF sheets are laminated together then screwed into the worktop. Screwed not glued, the designer said this way to allow any movement to take place. I decided on this bench design as it didn't involve any jointing of mortice and tenons, which at the moment I don't feel confident to make. Anyway I'd need a workbench to make them.... Catch 22 I think
People have expressed concerns about movement some more people than others about joining the MDF to the top with screws.As I say I'm sort of committed now so if goes pear shaped I will have to take it all off and stick several sheets of ply on top whatever, which cosmetically isn't so nice to work on. Yes I know its not a dining table but even so, I'd like a nice space to work on.
In the original design, he used two layers of MDF of 3/4" MDF edged with 1/2" oak and topped by a 1-1/2" thick edge glued oak IKEA countertop . I did buy an IKEA hollow core with 3mm Beech lamminated all round worktop.Then found for another £19 I could buy a solid Beech 2m x 62cm x 40mm for only another £19, so the IKEA went back and I bought the solid Beech one.
He cut oak strips off the IKEA top and glued these as edging to the MDF.
Now I'm thinking, of how to do this a bit differently.
I had my MDF sheets cut to the same size as my Beech top. I could trim the two laminated MDF sheets 1/2 inch all round the edges.Then get some Beech boards say 3/4" thick, first positioning the worktop all square inside the MDF and screwing the MDF to the worktop, so an equal uniform gap all round. Then plane and thickness the Beech boards to fill up that 1/2" gap exactly.Ripping the boards on the tablesaw allowing say 5mm to clean up any saw marking on the planer and sand edges, as have nothing set up to use a No 4. What advice do people have for putting edging on the MDF this way? Perhaps sealing the MDF edge up before using quick drying PVA. Or perhaps screw the edging into the MDF?
Or perhaps not trimming down the MDF but have a full height Beech board of 78mm which would cover the combined height of the Beech top and MDF, but then perhaps movement problems, glueing to the MDF and Beech top or counterbore screwing them together and filling up the counterbore with a Beech dowel plug?
I don't really know, so as ever any help and advice much appreciated.
Cheers.
"all men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night....wake in the day to find that it was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, to make it possible."
T.E. Lawrence
The workbench I'm making to learn various skills on see,
http://www.instructables.com/id/Buildin ... workbench/
I'm in a bit of a conundrum, the 40mm solid Beech worktop I bought as a top was £70 and having two big sheets of 19mm MDF cut was another 40 odd. So I'm £110+ in so far, with just these and feel committed to carry on.According to the designers plans the two 19mm MDF sheets are laminated together then screwed into the worktop. Screwed not glued, the designer said this way to allow any movement to take place. I decided on this bench design as it didn't involve any jointing of mortice and tenons, which at the moment I don't feel confident to make. Anyway I'd need a workbench to make them.... Catch 22 I think
People have expressed concerns about movement some more people than others about joining the MDF to the top with screws.As I say I'm sort of committed now so if goes pear shaped I will have to take it all off and stick several sheets of ply on top whatever, which cosmetically isn't so nice to work on. Yes I know its not a dining table but even so, I'd like a nice space to work on.
In the original design, he used two layers of MDF of 3/4" MDF edged with 1/2" oak and topped by a 1-1/2" thick edge glued oak IKEA countertop . I did buy an IKEA hollow core with 3mm Beech lamminated all round worktop.Then found for another £19 I could buy a solid Beech 2m x 62cm x 40mm for only another £19, so the IKEA went back and I bought the solid Beech one.
He cut oak strips off the IKEA top and glued these as edging to the MDF.
Now I'm thinking, of how to do this a bit differently.
I had my MDF sheets cut to the same size as my Beech top. I could trim the two laminated MDF sheets 1/2 inch all round the edges.Then get some Beech boards say 3/4" thick, first positioning the worktop all square inside the MDF and screwing the MDF to the worktop, so an equal uniform gap all round. Then plane and thickness the Beech boards to fill up that 1/2" gap exactly.Ripping the boards on the tablesaw allowing say 5mm to clean up any saw marking on the planer and sand edges, as have nothing set up to use a No 4. What advice do people have for putting edging on the MDF this way? Perhaps sealing the MDF edge up before using quick drying PVA. Or perhaps screw the edging into the MDF?
Or perhaps not trimming down the MDF but have a full height Beech board of 78mm which would cover the combined height of the Beech top and MDF, but then perhaps movement problems, glueing to the MDF and Beech top or counterbore screwing them together and filling up the counterbore with a Beech dowel plug?
I don't really know, so as ever any help and advice much appreciated.
Cheers.
"all men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night....wake in the day to find that it was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, to make it possible."
T.E. Lawrence