aebersold":3lxfzyol said:
Hi,
I need to make a couple of radiused doors to finish my kitchen off. I want to laminate them from thin layers of mdf over a former. If anyone has experience of this and can offer Info. regarding glue type, spring back, thickness of laminates etc. I’d be most grateful, save me making 10 ! They measure H710 x W300 x 25mm R = 260 through 90 degrees.
I would have attached a photo but that seems too complicated ! Alex
5 X 4 mm thick pieces of MDF will give 20 mm, or 6 X 3 mm MDF will give 18 mm: adjust laminate numbers to suit, but either thickness should be able to bend to a 260 mm radius, although you should check to ensure the material is supple enough. You should get little or no appreciable springback if you use either of those thicknesses and that number of layers.
Glue type: I'd use a non-creeper such urea formaldehyde or epoxy resin rather than PVA or aliphatic resin, but I generally avoid polyurethane adhesive for veneering and laminating.
Former: ideally something that won't give, so you could use lumps of MDF glued together after cutting a radius on each piece, make something with a framework and skin it with thin ply or offcuts of your MDF, or get a former cut. Or you can use a lump of styrofoam with the arc formed on the top surface and the flat face opposite.
Bending: An excellent option is either a vac-press or vac-bag, although you could make a male/female former and clamp your laminates between these, but this wouldn't be my preferred option; there are too many variables and the potential for things not working out.
Top tip of the lot, probably: make the doors first and then make the cabinets to suit the arc of the doors ... not the other way about. That way, if you miss the radius of the arc by a few millimetres, you can adjust the cabinetry without having to try and get a door to match an existing opening.
Apart from the above, I don't know if you already have a plan to treat door edges, apply a finish, attach hinges, pulls, and include a catch, so I've ignored those elements of the job. Slainte.