hertspretendchippy
Member
Hello all,
I'm looking for some advice on my dining room table project. The aim is to produce something that looks like this but also extendable....
As it's extendable - I'm making the table tops separately instead of making one big slab and cutting it up. I've mocked up the design of the table
Underside - Non-extended
Underside - Extended
Top
The top oak layer will be glued down onto the plywood surface using Gorilla wood glue and likewise for the oak trim around the edges. I decided on adding an apron around the table as this would hide the metal extending runner. The table will have alignment pins on the edge of the aprons and I'll add a toggle latch to prevent the table from sliding open.
Here's the thing...I jumped the gun and I've already applied the oak parquet planks to the top of the plywood. But after coming downstairs the very next morning there was some slight bowing (concave side being the exposed plywood face) in the leaf and the larger pieces (table top) seem ok but not perfect. The deflection was about 5mm over a 900mm span. This scared me and so I placed all the planks on the kitchen floor and added weight to straighten them out. I've just checked today and they have straightened out well enough to be acceptable. I've read this is due to an in balance of moisture in the faces - guessing that came from the glue!
I like to keep them flat as possible now and for the future. I've gone down a rabbit hole trying to figure out what the best approach is and there are a few:
After looking everywhere for answers I realise now that I should have either used an old table top or started off with a torsion box. I bought some mild steel 20mm angle and tested it out on another piece of bowed 18mm plywood to see if it would straighten it out. The results were much better but again, not perfect. The steel bar was 700mm in length and the plywood was 900mm (steel bar placed in the centre and secured with 5 evenly spaced 13mm wood screws).
Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Tom
I'm looking for some advice on my dining room table project. The aim is to produce something that looks like this but also extendable....
As it's extendable - I'm making the table tops separately instead of making one big slab and cutting it up. I've mocked up the design of the table
Underside - Non-extended
Underside - Extended
Top
The top oak layer will be glued down onto the plywood surface using Gorilla wood glue and likewise for the oak trim around the edges. I decided on adding an apron around the table as this would hide the metal extending runner. The table will have alignment pins on the edge of the aprons and I'll add a toggle latch to prevent the table from sliding open.
Here's the thing...I jumped the gun and I've already applied the oak parquet planks to the top of the plywood. But after coming downstairs the very next morning there was some slight bowing (concave side being the exposed plywood face) in the leaf and the larger pieces (table top) seem ok but not perfect. The deflection was about 5mm over a 900mm span. This scared me and so I placed all the planks on the kitchen floor and added weight to straighten them out. I've just checked today and they have straightened out well enough to be acceptable. I've read this is due to an in balance of moisture in the faces - guessing that came from the glue!
I like to keep them flat as possible now and for the future. I've gone down a rabbit hole trying to figure out what the best approach is and there are a few:
- Additional plywood layer - maybe 9mm?!
- Torsion box - I've only seen the torsion box applied to the entire underside of a plywood faced table. I would need to make the top thicker and try to source oak strips (£££) to accommodate the extra thickness so I would like to avoid this one.
- Partial torsion box - building the torsion box within the apron and making the apron taller to hide the extending runners.
- Mild Steel C channels - Adding 40mm x 20mm x 5mm channel parallel with the legs. I would then have to add filler pieces so the extension runners can be fixed.
- Plywood stretchers - Like above but instead of steel, cutting strips 15cm strips out of 18mm plywood and gluing two pieces together.
After looking everywhere for answers I realise now that I should have either used an old table top or started off with a torsion box. I bought some mild steel 20mm angle and tested it out on another piece of bowed 18mm plywood to see if it would straighten it out. The results were much better but again, not perfect. The steel bar was 700mm in length and the plywood was 900mm (steel bar placed in the centre and secured with 5 evenly spaced 13mm wood screws).
Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Tom