throbscottle
Established Member
I decided to use pallet wood edge-upwards to make a nice heavy bench, since wood is expensive. Finally dismantled enough pallets to make a good start at least.
Someone gave me an old beam that must have come from their house - about the only large thing I have that isn't twisted! So I've used that as a flat base to clamp the first strips down to.
I had tried an experiment using the table saw to even up some fairly wobbly pieces. It worked to a limited extent, but proved over-wasteful and the end result wasn't worth the effort. So I'll stick with the pieces that are fairly even to start with. Didn't seem worth making a jig to flatten these thin pieces.
I started off with the best pieces of pallet wood to make a nice base for the rest of the build. Just 1 long and 1 shorter piece per layer, alternate ways, picked out to have equal (or as nearly as I can get) thickness, ripped down to 3 inches wide, picked the best edge for the bench top. I found my cross-cut saw (rescued from a skip!) isn't true. Took a little while to work out how to make the slightly sloping ends match up. Sanded the faces with the orbital sander. All the nail holes will be hidden inside, though I might drill out and plug the ones at the front, eventually..
Using some PVA glue which was originally bought to prepare a wall for plastering, applied with a brush. Pretty sure I'm putting it on thick enough, but it just won't come squeezing out the edges. Guess that shows the wood's not very smooth. After glueing layer 1 to layer 0, I decided to brush the non-glue side with water to even up the moisture - glad I did because it took some muck off too!
So there's quite a way to go - first 3 layers only 2 inches thick, going to take a while to get to 24 inches! Hoping the rest will go quicker now I know what I'm doing!
Someone gave me an old beam that must have come from their house - about the only large thing I have that isn't twisted! So I've used that as a flat base to clamp the first strips down to.
I had tried an experiment using the table saw to even up some fairly wobbly pieces. It worked to a limited extent, but proved over-wasteful and the end result wasn't worth the effort. So I'll stick with the pieces that are fairly even to start with. Didn't seem worth making a jig to flatten these thin pieces.
I started off with the best pieces of pallet wood to make a nice base for the rest of the build. Just 1 long and 1 shorter piece per layer, alternate ways, picked out to have equal (or as nearly as I can get) thickness, ripped down to 3 inches wide, picked the best edge for the bench top. I found my cross-cut saw (rescued from a skip!) isn't true. Took a little while to work out how to make the slightly sloping ends match up. Sanded the faces with the orbital sander. All the nail holes will be hidden inside, though I might drill out and plug the ones at the front, eventually..
Using some PVA glue which was originally bought to prepare a wall for plastering, applied with a brush. Pretty sure I'm putting it on thick enough, but it just won't come squeezing out the edges. Guess that shows the wood's not very smooth. After glueing layer 1 to layer 0, I decided to brush the non-glue side with water to even up the moisture - glad I did because it took some muck off too!
So there's quite a way to go - first 3 layers only 2 inches thick, going to take a while to get to 24 inches! Hoping the rest will go quicker now I know what I'm doing!