FrenchIan
Established Member
If I wanted to make a table top out of, say, oak planks glued together, and running longways, I'm told I have to allow for this "slab" to expand sideways, otherwise there's a risk it'll buckle. If I want to screw it to the carcass of the table, the screws have to be in slots.
Does this mean I have to go under the table every week, and loosen/tighten each screw? Or, are the screws tightened up just perfectly, so they can self-adjust, while still holding the top snugly?
Then, suppose I wanted breadboard ends, to hide the end grain of the "slab". I can't screw the end tightly to the "slab" across the width, because it'll expand differently. Does this mean that at different times, it may be longer or shorter that the width of the table?
Please excuse these ignorant questions, but this has been worrying me for a while.
Cheers
Does this mean I have to go under the table every week, and loosen/tighten each screw? Or, are the screws tightened up just perfectly, so they can self-adjust, while still holding the top snugly?
Then, suppose I wanted breadboard ends, to hide the end grain of the "slab". I can't screw the end tightly to the "slab" across the width, because it'll expand differently. Does this mean that at different times, it may be longer or shorter that the width of the table?
Please excuse these ignorant questions, but this has been worrying me for a while.
Cheers