Jacob
What goes around comes around.
Yes I checked with Joyce. He presents every alternative! He says thin or loose backs are a feature of cheap furniture. Oh well, cheap furniture is all I know!I don't think it is a simple observation. I've made lots of furniture out of both solid and manufactured boards. For the solid, I allowed for expansion/ contraction; the ply etc I didn't. I never had a problem with either, ecxept a couple of times when I ignored some basic rules like not sticking a long bit of end grain to a piece of long grain. I have had a look in Joyce. He says, "In all carcass work it should be remembered that while a well-fitted carcass back, grooved, screwed or glued in position will help to achieve overall stiffness and squareness, it will not automatically ensure such rigidity"
But think I could be right in certain circumstances.
I only thought about it at all because someone I know made an immaculate cupboard with sliding doors, which stuck. He said he thought the solid fixed back would have stabilised it, and it had, but at the back not the front.
I checked several other cupboards and they all had loose (ish) backs, both modern and traditional. Presumably cheap furniture!
Trad chests of drawers need structurally tight front, loose runners, and the back loose without being particularly structural
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