I'm currently designing a wardrobe with a pair of matching chests of drawers. For aesthetic reasons the client wants to have flat plank wardrobe doors of solid oak to tie in with the design of other elements of the pieces (eg all of the drawer fronts will be a single flat panel of oak). It's a triple wardrobe (3 doors wide). The largest door is 1900 x 460 (the other two are same width but slightly shorter).
My concern is keeping the doors flat across their width and top to bottom. My current strategy is:
1: Use kiln dried quarter sawn oak.
2: Make each door from 5 fairly narrow boards (92mm each).
3: Where there is any deviation from the perpendicular in the orientation of the growth rings to the face of the boards, alternate the boards in the usual "smiles" and "frowns" way.
4: Add a number of cleats to the back of the doors. I'm planning to use hidden blind sliding dovetails for the cleats which looks slightly more sophistcated than the usual screws and allows me to lose some of the depth of the cleat in the thickness of the door (the one on the right in the test piece photo below).
I'm pretty confident that the combination of the above will prevent the doors warping across their width but there is no physical restraint on bowing top to bottom (or, I guess, twisting end to end). I'm loathe to add more bracing to the back of the doors (eg diagonal bracing between the cleats) as I'm concerned it would make what is supposed to be a clean design slightly agricultural (albeit only on the inside).
Any thoughts greatly appreciated.
Many thanks
My concern is keeping the doors flat across their width and top to bottom. My current strategy is:
1: Use kiln dried quarter sawn oak.
2: Make each door from 5 fairly narrow boards (92mm each).
3: Where there is any deviation from the perpendicular in the orientation of the growth rings to the face of the boards, alternate the boards in the usual "smiles" and "frowns" way.
4: Add a number of cleats to the back of the doors. I'm planning to use hidden blind sliding dovetails for the cleats which looks slightly more sophistcated than the usual screws and allows me to lose some of the depth of the cleat in the thickness of the door (the one on the right in the test piece photo below).
I'm pretty confident that the combination of the above will prevent the doors warping across their width but there is no physical restraint on bowing top to bottom (or, I guess, twisting end to end). I'm loathe to add more bracing to the back of the doors (eg diagonal bracing between the cleats) as I'm concerned it would make what is supposed to be a clean design slightly agricultural (albeit only on the inside).
Any thoughts greatly appreciated.
Many thanks