Teak dining table help please

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gasman

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A 'mate' has given me some teak that he and his family have had in storage for over 50 years. It is bone dry (9-11% on my moisture meter when I measured it - and a huge variety of different shapes and sizes. First thing I did was measure each piece and put it all in a spreadsheet and there is 18 cu feet in total. He wants me to make him a coffee table, dining table and a few bedside tables. He will pay me either in cash or in teak if there is any left over. OK so I have so far made a coffee table to his design which is fine and I am quite happy with the deal.
The problem I would like help with is that, for the dining table, I am very limited in the thickness of the long teak planks. I have some 22-23mm boards but they are just about 5'6" feet in length - about 1650mm. There is not enough for a 900 wide table which is the minimum. On the other hand there is enough 19mm teak planks all over 6 feet in length (1800mm plus), with breadboard ends to make a 950 x 2000 table which is what they want. These boards have already been thicknessed so this will be the final size. I have enough to make a very sturdy base with aprons etc to support it all and beautiful 90mm square teak legs. So I wonder what you all think - is it feasible to make a table this size with such a thin tabletop - if not I am not sure what I can do as there is not enough of other sizes. Would be grateful for some help and advice
Thanks
Mark
 
cant see a problem with the thin top, could use thicker section for breadboard ends and edges to appear thicker than it is? then brace well underneath.
 
OK thanks for the advice
So if I had a 2 inch overhang of table top over the base at the sides I should make this thicker?? I think I still might be short of enough long planks. If I tried very carefully to grain match - what do you think about having one board joined lengthways in the centre of the table? Does anyone else have an opinion on the suitability of 19mm teak for a table top - do you think it would look too thin and weedy?
Thanks
Mark
 
phil.p":3faqdiy5 said:
Double it up around the edges - 38mm's a nice depth for the edge. Who's going to know that it's 19mm?

Yeah - classic design, and it also stops the table being absurdly heavy.

BugBear
 
Many thanks for the advice - that is what I am going to do. One minor problem, which the customer is happy with, is that the wood I had selected for the base - including 80mm square legs (which will be tapered to 60 all round) and the aprons / rails - turn out after planing not to be teak (I did think they were a bit heavy) but apparently blackwood - which, apart from lignum is the hardest thing I have ever tried to machine / cut. I have been sharpening planes etc every 10 minutes or so
Will get photos this weekend
Thanks again for the advice
Mark
 
Here is an example of an oak top which was 3/4" like your teak. I breadboarded the ends and then trimmed the ends with 38mm pieces around all the showing sides with mitred corners.

It looks slab like...just what you need.
 

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these show how weedy the top looks without the beefing up trim ie just 3/4". Also the humungous clamping requirement to get the dam stuff to stay put over this near 3m length!!
 

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+1 for all of the above,if you cant get a good grain match for joining two pieces lengthwise in the middle you could place the narrower pieces either side of the table which should look ok.
 
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