Not glue, wood panels need to move naturally with the seasons. T&G are specifically cut that way so they can move with the tongue preventing any gaps to show.I am in the process of making some garden gates and they will have a centre panel of tongue and grooved boarding, should the boards be glued or just slotted together
Yes, I would suggest a pin top and bottom in the centre of each T&G board, but don’t squeeze them together first , leave a little room to expand. Also yes to pre-painting the tongues.Not glue, wood panels need to move naturally with the seasons. T&G are specifically cut that way so they can move with the tongue preventing any gaps to show.
You seem to understand the principles of wood movement but not the role of T&G boarding in dealing with it. The whole point of T&G is to allow individual board movement. To achieve this the boards must not be packed up tightly, let alone glued. The consequence of doing so is increased risk of board splitting.I've glued large panels of T&G without any issue what so ever.
If you really understand wood movement then you should understand that making a single wide panel from several pieces glued together is no different that a single solid panel, just stronger
This planter is just shy of 10 years old. The entire panel is glued together and floats in the frame.
I'm not sure which type of gates you are intending to make.I am in the process of making some garden gates and they will have a centre panel of tongue and grooved boarding, should the boards be glued or just slotted together
Let me be perfectly clear the T&G boards are glued to each other NOT the frame. It's nothing more than a large floating panel, no different than a solid piece. There is no reason that it should fail.You seem to understand the principles of wood movement but not the role of T&G boarding in dealing with it. The whole point of T&G is to allow individual board movement. To achieve this the boards must not be packed up tightly, let alone glued. The consequence of doing so is increased risk of board splitting.
The claim that the panel is stronger is superfluous. The strength of the structure is in the frame.
I suspect your success with your planter is due to your CA climate and your probable(?) waterproof lining.
Brian
Thanks, I and the other contributors will, according to the long established principles of panel construction and floor laying using T&G boards.BTW, it was just a suggestion, you build panels anyway you like
You seem to understand the principles of wood movement but not the role of T&G boarding in dealing with it. The whole point of T&G is to allow individual board movement. To achieve this the boards must not be packed up tightly, let alone glued. The consequence of doing so is increased risk of board splitting.
The claim that the panel is stronger is superfluous. The strength of the structure is in the frame.
I suspect your success with your planter is due to your CA climate and your probable(?) waterproof lining.
Brian
Thanks, I and the other contributors will, according to the long established principles of panel construction and floor laying using T&G boards.
So when the piece in the center needs to expand, it has to push both sides 500mm?Totes agree. It's asking a lot of timber that's outdoors to slide smoothly in a groove. OK for 100mm but a big ask for 1000mm. It's likely that rather than slide in the grooves, it will catch somewhere and the panel will split somewhere.
Of course it’s okay. If it works for you crack on.I had also made a matching planter with similar construction, is this okay?
View attachment 184943
I did glue those three together, did I break a rule? please let me know, I done want to get fined.
All kidding aside, it's nothing special or out of the norm, just a floating panel,
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