No.
Guess you being in OZ don't get to see the prices over here? It's shockingly expensive! and my cash is spent trying to keep rear end out of the water with leccy/gas along with food/fuel making your eyes water more than a tub of freshly peeled/chopped prime onions!Do you value your time and skill ?
If so, find some decent wood that is worth the effort.
Sure, you can use pallet wood - but why bother ?
If it comes down to cost, just make less - but better.
Shelving ,tool racks ect in the workshop saves £sIve made a few things with pallets and as you say it does feel creative, a limiting factor is the length unless your happy with a few “rustic” nail holes or can incorporate them into the build, I have a pallet length upright spice rack and one that I really like is an electric meter cover for my sons hairdressers shop, that was pallet wood with galvanised steel panels that have big industrial dimples punched into them, which were the rear panels from old Dimplex Storage heaters, it looked great and I wanted him to just wash some light paint on it, maybe with a rag, but it ended up brown!
Still looks good though sitting against a bare brick wall.
I like using reclaimed wood and pallets certainly have their place.
Steve.
Even though prices in Aus are crazy, I do understand that inflation in UK is sky high. So I do understand the need to seek out ways to keep your costs down.Guess you being in OZ don't get to see the prices over here? It's shockingly expensive! and my cash is spent trying to keep rear end out of the water with leccy/gas along with food/fuel making your eyes water more than a tub of freshly peeled/chopped prime onions!
And thought part of woodwork was the creative aspect?Just turning something into something useable is creative? But it's all free wood and my Charity group has little cash and get donations from places one being a picture framing company that gives us offcuts of soft/hard woods.
plus pallet wood is good outside for bird boxes etc as if used "high Class" wood it would need protecting with finishes which RSPB etc don't like
Also one i cut up other day someone is using to make a gate for there garden.
I'm more than happy just cutting pallets up as still being creative! well helps someone else out and last time cut leg up from a snooker table which left a big round mahogany looking big round part with what looks like a top to it and hopefully guys going to put on lathe sand it up then square neck up cut it off low as pos then hollow out pot to make a big mahogany jar with lid? or my other thoughts was chop some port holes in sides cut some shapes out of perspex etc place them in like a wooden window then with some thin hardwood shape a moulding and fix in like window frames then place an led light inside.Even though prices in Aus are crazy, I do understand that inflation in UK is sky high. So I do understand the need to seek out ways to keep your costs down.
And you are right, there are suitable applications for pallet wood ( heat treated only ).
It's great that you are working with a charity group, and I like your balanced and realistic position.
No your just thinking out side the norm I like itI'm more than happy just cutting pallets up as still being creative! well helps someone else out and last time cut leg up from a snooker table which left a big round mahogany looking big round part with what looks like a top to it and hopefully guys going to put on lathe sand it up then square neck up cut it off low as pos then hollow out pot to make a big mahogany jar with lid? or my other thoughts was chop some port holes in sides cut some shapes out of perspex etc place them in like a wooden window then with some thin hardwood shape a moulding and fix in like window frames then place an led light inside.
I'm full of wacky ideas! lol
The answer is that you absolutely can. Though I would not do it myself. As others have said there are a huge verity of pallets and shipping frames, as far as wood species are concerned along with a verity of qualities.Hi
Can you make decent looking projects using pallet wood?
I can potentially get hold of pallets through work - but am trying to decide if its worth the hassle of removing nails and such
Thanks
Matt
Or use it outdoors for junk jobs like compost bins.Do you value your time and skill ?
If so, find some decent wood that is worth the effort.
Sure, you can use pallet wood - but why bother ?
If it comes down to cost, just make less - but better.
the 'no budget' argument is such a simple way of placing no value on people's requests / ideas, and invaraibly is followed a week later by an overpriced and unnesacery purchase. insulting and aggrivatingAs a school site manager I get tired of being told there's no budget ...
Recip with right blade is red hot knive through melted butter!.One way to separate the assorted pallet parts/bits is to use a multi tool - use a metal cutting blade - to slice through the nails. Simply insert the blade between the two adjacent surfaces and let the cutter do the work. If the residual nails parts when left in the wood are no problem, fine. If they are a problem then punch them out? I’m making a log store where I cut through the nails holding the supporting parts from the main upper layer of an “H” type pallet, and that upper layer forms the back of the store. The parts of the nails left in the wood are no problem.
I used to hack saw through the nails, so as to avoid splitting the boards if trying to prise them apart. The multi tool is so much easier and more efficien.
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