Wrongfoot
Established Member
I've a reasonable quantity of offcuts of laminated oak worktop material. The stuff made from grain aligned long blocks pressed and glued together faces glued ends finger jointed.
Some useful lengths and sizes.
2 of sink cut-outs 900mm x 500mm (grain long axis)
3 of 2500mm x 300mm (grain long axis)
2 of 900mm x 500mm (grain short axis)
and many more smaller pieces.
It's lovely looking stuff in a kitchen worktop. It's not easy to hand work the blocks mean that the grain reverses repeatedly across and along the material. It's hand plane-able (just) with a razor edge kept very sharp and fine using a "bailey type" plane. Actually easier to sand or machine finish. Also the manufacturing method of pressing the blocks means it all behaves together as torsion wood with cuts closing around saw kerfs, wedges needed etc. but small sections and individual laminate blocks are stable enough when cut away from the mass. In fact they are very split proof individually, as I think they were all kiln dried pieces with no splits before glueing into the laminate top.
Do you guys have any original ideas for re-use?
I could make a top for Roubo bench laminating it up 2-3" thick - be a bit of a pig to flatten but I reckon the stresses would cancel out across the top as they already do in a 1" worktop (might be a stupid project as I'd need to buy some other oak for tool wells etc. so an expensive upcycle),
maybe (invisible along laminate grain lines) glue it up into a 1" thick assembly table top,
just dice it up and glue it all with the grain coming up through the large face and make chopping boards/butchers blocks (I'm aware that oak isn't seen as the "best" material, but it's still often used),
Dice it into tea light holders, door wedges, please give me ideas for a load of small pieces...
If I turn I'd have a lifetimes supply of 40mm x 40mm x (up to) 500mm oak, (without glue lines) for spindle turning stuff, but I don't have a lathe at present. I could cut it into blanks and sell/give it to turners as oak pieces? It's not specially figured, but some bits might look nice enough with medullary rays, especially showing through a tannic stain.
Any other suggestions? Seems a shame to waste stuff, but I don't want to send time "polishing a cowpat". Forum won't let me me say t*rd
Some useful lengths and sizes.
2 of sink cut-outs 900mm x 500mm (grain long axis)
3 of 2500mm x 300mm (grain long axis)
2 of 900mm x 500mm (grain short axis)
and many more smaller pieces.
It's lovely looking stuff in a kitchen worktop. It's not easy to hand work the blocks mean that the grain reverses repeatedly across and along the material. It's hand plane-able (just) with a razor edge kept very sharp and fine using a "bailey type" plane. Actually easier to sand or machine finish. Also the manufacturing method of pressing the blocks means it all behaves together as torsion wood with cuts closing around saw kerfs, wedges needed etc. but small sections and individual laminate blocks are stable enough when cut away from the mass. In fact they are very split proof individually, as I think they were all kiln dried pieces with no splits before glueing into the laminate top.
Do you guys have any original ideas for re-use?
I could make a top for Roubo bench laminating it up 2-3" thick - be a bit of a pig to flatten but I reckon the stresses would cancel out across the top as they already do in a 1" worktop (might be a stupid project as I'd need to buy some other oak for tool wells etc. so an expensive upcycle),
maybe (invisible along laminate grain lines) glue it up into a 1" thick assembly table top,
just dice it up and glue it all with the grain coming up through the large face and make chopping boards/butchers blocks (I'm aware that oak isn't seen as the "best" material, but it's still often used),
Dice it into tea light holders, door wedges, please give me ideas for a load of small pieces...
If I turn I'd have a lifetimes supply of 40mm x 40mm x (up to) 500mm oak, (without glue lines) for spindle turning stuff, but I don't have a lathe at present. I could cut it into blanks and sell/give it to turners as oak pieces? It's not specially figured, but some bits might look nice enough with medullary rays, especially showing through a tannic stain.
Any other suggestions? Seems a shame to waste stuff, but I don't want to send time "polishing a cowpat". Forum won't let me me say t*rd