Which Plywood for Bed Slats

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

sams93

Established Member
Joined
3 May 2022
Messages
649
Reaction score
349
Location
East Sussex
So I am making a rather large bed, and am planning to use flat 3/4" ply for the bed slats (With a central support). I can get hold of birch plywood at fairly reasonable prices, but ovbiously hardwood ply is cheaper.

Is there any reason not to use hardwood ply over birch ply for the bed slats which I will never see again until I move house and have to dissasemble it all....
 
I can't see any technical reason why you should not use cheaper hardwood ply but I wouldn't simply for the reason that the surcing of so much of it is dubious and unsustainable, their is a reason why it is cheap. If you can source birch ply at what you describe as a reasonable price, then why not?

Jim
 
What ply used will not make as much difference as the difference between ply and solid wood. I would first check how bendy it is for the width its going to span. Ply will sag more than solid wood as half the layers have the grain running crosswise.
Regards
John
 
So I am making a rather large bed, and am planning to use flat 3/4" ply for the bed slats (With a central support). I can get hold of birch plywood at fairly reasonable prices, but ovbiously hardwood ply is cheaper.

Is there any reason not to use hardwood ply over birch ply for the bed slats which I will never see again until I move house and have to dissasemble it all....
Plywood slats are a bad idea, as has been mentioned plywood is weak compared to a reasonable quality wood. Also 3/4“ ply is certainly not strong enough.

You can use it if you form it into “I” beams but by itself it isn’t strong enough, quit likely even if you use it in sheet form it won’t be strong enough unless you re-enforce it.

If you are dead set on using plywood then use construction grade material, hardwood and birch plywood are designed for aesthetic use rather than strength.

This is our bed

 
Last edited:
Ply slats will not be as strong as pine slats due to all the cross grain. Flexible pre sprung slats can make the mattress feel very different in a way you may or may not like.
 
Just buy presprung slats from ikea. You can't make them for the same money.
They have a soft feel.

But a good mattress maker will tell you to put their matress on a solid base and to board over slats if you have them, so may be best not to use slats at all.
 
Just buy presprung slats from ikea. You can't make them for the same money.
They have a soft feel.

But a good mattress maker will tell you to put their matress on a solid base and to board over slats if you have them, so may be best not to use slats at all.
I thought the whole idea of slats was to allow the underside of the mattress to breathe.
Regards
John
 
No idea.
Solid slab foam matresses are non reversible and don't breathe.
But proper handmade traditional matresses maybe do.
Both recommend a solid base.
 
When I made my boy's bed frame, I used softwood slats. But it didn't cost me a penny as I used slats from a bed someone was throwing away. This is strong enough for both him and I to be jumping on it :D

20220809_181409.jpg
20220809_175239.jpg


All I had to do was cut them to the correct length.

For no money, if you hunt around, you can get hardwood / softwood slats which are the right bits for the job.

Or you can go down the pre sprung slats.

Third option would be as someone said, use ply to construct an I-beam or T-beam, but this would be a less efficient use of materials for this application.
 
My double bed I made , off the shelf 3x1 pine slats with the central support you say you are going to use has worked well for me
 

Latest posts

Back
Top