I've been making a tool chest in accordance with the plan in the book The Anarchist's Tool Chest by Christopher Schwarz. When it comes to the tills he recommends that they be fitted with oak bottoms as oak is hard wearing. The rest of the tills should made of pine.
As it happens the few bits of oak I have have already been cut to rough length with a view to making a bedding box out of them and so I didn't have suitable pieces for the till bottoms. However, it occurred to me that a couple of small offcuts could be put to use. This is because the tills ride only on thin strips on the two side walls of the chest. Therefore most of the oak of a complete bottom is irrelevant in terms of it being hard wearing. So I cut a rebate on the offcuts and matched it to the till ends:
Then it was a matter of nailing, gluing and sinking the nail heads:
And here's the one I made earlier. The two bits of the pine bottom simply had the ends rebated to fit under the oak ends.
A side effect of this construction method is that it helps keep weight down as relatively little dense oak is used.
As it happens the few bits of oak I have have already been cut to rough length with a view to making a bedding box out of them and so I didn't have suitable pieces for the till bottoms. However, it occurred to me that a couple of small offcuts could be put to use. This is because the tills ride only on thin strips on the two side walls of the chest. Therefore most of the oak of a complete bottom is irrelevant in terms of it being hard wearing. So I cut a rebate on the offcuts and matched it to the till ends:
Then it was a matter of nailing, gluing and sinking the nail heads:
And here's the one I made earlier. The two bits of the pine bottom simply had the ends rebated to fit under the oak ends.
A side effect of this construction method is that it helps keep weight down as relatively little dense oak is used.