gasman
Established Member
I bought some lovely walnut last weekend from Andychip38 of this parish (thanks Andy its lovely wood)
SWMBO wants a new dining table and she really likes this design
It has an interesting design but I don't know how the maker gets it strong enough.
The legs are part through the top as shown here
It looks like there is a rail between each pair of legs but no rails along the length of the table.
It also looks like there are screws or wooden dowels used - one visible on the table top going down into the leg and 2 visible on the side of the leg
So far so good - however I don't get how big splits don't open up as the table acclimatises in a CH house. We all know that no matter how many weeks you acclimatise the wood for, once the finished work is inside a CH heated house it will move a bit. The table top will shrink by a few mm which must surely leave a gap at either side. On the website http://www.studiomoe.com there are other tables, some of which look like the rail between the legs doesn't actually join the legs - and presumably just acts to prevent movement of the table top - in which case I don't see how the table can possibly be strong enough to resist lateral movement of the legs - it is a solid thick top so must weigh a ton
Anyone any clever explanations??
Thanks all
Regards Mark
SWMBO wants a new dining table and she really likes this design
It has an interesting design but I don't know how the maker gets it strong enough.
The legs are part through the top as shown here
It looks like there is a rail between each pair of legs but no rails along the length of the table.
It also looks like there are screws or wooden dowels used - one visible on the table top going down into the leg and 2 visible on the side of the leg
So far so good - however I don't get how big splits don't open up as the table acclimatises in a CH house. We all know that no matter how many weeks you acclimatise the wood for, once the finished work is inside a CH heated house it will move a bit. The table top will shrink by a few mm which must surely leave a gap at either side. On the website http://www.studiomoe.com there are other tables, some of which look like the rail between the legs doesn't actually join the legs - and presumably just acts to prevent movement of the table top - in which case I don't see how the table can possibly be strong enough to resist lateral movement of the legs - it is a solid thick top so must weigh a ton
Anyone any clever explanations??
Thanks all
Regards Mark