YorkshireMartin
Established Member
Oh guys and girls, I'm such a muppet.
These past few years, I've learned so much about fine furniture, wasted so much quality timber, ruined so many joints and yet here I am again, lamenting a failure in a simple task, which was entirely preventable.
I had to install some skirting in the hallway as we laid a tiled floor a few months ago. So what do I do, despite KNOWING it was a mistake. I go to B&Q, with 2 year old "helping". After 30 minutes of him playing with trim sections and not accomplishing anything mum turned up to help entertain him so I could pick timber. So, I spend over an hour going through the entire stack to find the least cupped/twisted/bowed sections of 15x94 (or so), I only needed 3 for the small hallway. I know it's B&Q timber but I can make it work, I thought.
I take them home and install them. I use adhesive (evostik grip) that had been stored in the shed for a few months, knowing in the back of mind it was a big risk, even commenting to the wife it was. I thought I'd save a fiver. I stuck them to the wall and nailed them on with the finish nailer.
Now, 6 hours after fitting it all, it's a disaster.
The adhesive, predictably, has completely failed and the timber is cupping so bad, that all the mitres have opened up top and bottom. They were barely acceptable to start with as every length was cupped, albeit mildly, but they would have sufficed with a bit of filer. Now, you could drive a micro machine through the top and bottom of the joints. That's with only 4 hours of central heating exposure.
I'm going to redo the entire job.
Folks, if your gut tells you something, follow it. I'm too embarassed to even post pictures.
These past few years, I've learned so much about fine furniture, wasted so much quality timber, ruined so many joints and yet here I am again, lamenting a failure in a simple task, which was entirely preventable.
I had to install some skirting in the hallway as we laid a tiled floor a few months ago. So what do I do, despite KNOWING it was a mistake. I go to B&Q, with 2 year old "helping". After 30 minutes of him playing with trim sections and not accomplishing anything mum turned up to help entertain him so I could pick timber. So, I spend over an hour going through the entire stack to find the least cupped/twisted/bowed sections of 15x94 (or so), I only needed 3 for the small hallway. I know it's B&Q timber but I can make it work, I thought.
I take them home and install them. I use adhesive (evostik grip) that had been stored in the shed for a few months, knowing in the back of mind it was a big risk, even commenting to the wife it was. I thought I'd save a fiver. I stuck them to the wall and nailed them on with the finish nailer.
Now, 6 hours after fitting it all, it's a disaster.
The adhesive, predictably, has completely failed and the timber is cupping so bad, that all the mitres have opened up top and bottom. They were barely acceptable to start with as every length was cupped, albeit mildly, but they would have sufficed with a bit of filer. Now, you could drive a micro machine through the top and bottom of the joints. That's with only 4 hours of central heating exposure.
I'm going to redo the entire job.
Folks, if your gut tells you something, follow it. I'm too embarassed to even post pictures.