Baball
Established Member
Hello. I am still relatively new to woodworking and learning a lot on each project and from this forum.
For my third project I have started building a play kitchen for my kids for Christmas. I glued up this panel for the worktop from two oak boards (800mm x 210mm) in my garage workshop on Friday, using Titebond 3 and aligned with biscuits. I came back the next day and found it had dried this chalky white on the surface. The temperature in the garage was around 5 degrees when I found this and the lower limit for Titebond 3 is 45 fahrenheit which is around 7 celsius. I don't know what the temperature was on the day of the glue up, but before using it I had kept the glue in the house so that it wasn't too cold.
There are sections that have dried the yellowy/brown colour I would have expected, at the end grain and where the clamps and cauls were, but the rest is white like this. Do I need to cut down that glue line and do it again?
The boards aren't aligned at the ends as I will trim it to size later.
Thanks for any advice!
For my third project I have started building a play kitchen for my kids for Christmas. I glued up this panel for the worktop from two oak boards (800mm x 210mm) in my garage workshop on Friday, using Titebond 3 and aligned with biscuits. I came back the next day and found it had dried this chalky white on the surface. The temperature in the garage was around 5 degrees when I found this and the lower limit for Titebond 3 is 45 fahrenheit which is around 7 celsius. I don't know what the temperature was on the day of the glue up, but before using it I had kept the glue in the house so that it wasn't too cold.
There are sections that have dried the yellowy/brown colour I would have expected, at the end grain and where the clamps and cauls were, but the rest is white like this. Do I need to cut down that glue line and do it again?
The boards aren't aligned at the ends as I will trim it to size later.
Thanks for any advice!