Against my better judgement I have decided to opt for oak tops in my new kitchen :roll:
This may have been discussed before, my apologies if it has and I've missed this particular method but here goes, my plan is to join the tops with floating tenons, say 5, front edge being tight fit and glued, the other 5 with some lateral movement and an expansion gap at the rear of the top to be covered by the upstand or tiling.
The kitchen is an L shape so only the one joint to consider. The corner is reasonably far from 90 degrees so if I were relying on just worktop bolts I think seasonal movement would introduce a weird twisting to the bolts and a generally unpredictable join.
I am also hoping the if the floating tenons (I'm thinking domino xl) were long enough and a reasonably snug fit top to bottom it should keep the join close to flush.
I have seen a few bad solid oak tops in recent years and its made me quite wary, visible bowing, cracking and recently a top where you could feel every stave was a lump or dip.
Really just looking for some advice and happy to go off in a different tangent entirely if its worked for you.
...but I would love an excuse to buy a domino XL that makes it seem like I'm doing the better half a favour so just tell me its a great idea :lol:
This may have been discussed before, my apologies if it has and I've missed this particular method but here goes, my plan is to join the tops with floating tenons, say 5, front edge being tight fit and glued, the other 5 with some lateral movement and an expansion gap at the rear of the top to be covered by the upstand or tiling.
The kitchen is an L shape so only the one joint to consider. The corner is reasonably far from 90 degrees so if I were relying on just worktop bolts I think seasonal movement would introduce a weird twisting to the bolts and a generally unpredictable join.
I am also hoping the if the floating tenons (I'm thinking domino xl) were long enough and a reasonably snug fit top to bottom it should keep the join close to flush.
I have seen a few bad solid oak tops in recent years and its made me quite wary, visible bowing, cracking and recently a top where you could feel every stave was a lump or dip.
Really just looking for some advice and happy to go off in a different tangent entirely if its worked for you.
...but I would love an excuse to buy a domino XL that makes it seem like I'm doing the better half a favour so just tell me its a great idea :lol: