Not quite right phil.p. It will definitely fail.phil.p":8pev7dxx said:I'd have thought it would pull itself to bits.
For an outdoor table that would almost certainly fail too, because I'm assuming you're talking about fixing thin solid wood sections down onto something like plywood. If that's the case, it won't stand up to the rigours of exterior conditions. What is needed is something that allows each piece of wood to move independently from every other piece, and for water to run off easily. Slats, maybe 50 - 150 mm wide incorporating gaps between each slat do work. The slats can be contained within an outer framework, where frequently they are tenoned into the edge of the frame (or similar) or simply fixed individually to stout bearers without an encircling framework. Long and wide surfaces made of solid wood just don't work - rain, sun, snow, freezing conditions, etc, cause large cross grain movement and distortion, which leads to rapid failure. Slainte.deema":25r1htn7 said:Depending on your client, I would not make it completely out of solid wood for the reasons mentioned. I would select a good stable base material, and them simply laminate 10mm thick or so strips of the chosen wood on top of it. The edge pieces I would make the full thickness and just rebate out to allow the base to sit inside and be hidden from view. This then gives a proper loom to the edge rather than having a laminated edging. The appearance as a whole would be of a solid wood table. If the client does not want to see the base material underneath, again I would just laminate on the chosen material.
I believe it would be a very quick build and offer your client a quality product that should be stable.
The solution is simple. Take your original sketch and incorporate gaps so that each piece is independent of the next. M&T the individual parts together, perhaps incorporating draw-boring of the critical structural elements. Essentially a series of diminishing frames within frames. I think Chrispy is pointing you in the same direction. If you can't work it out for yourself I can offer a design service ... for a fee, ha, ha. Slainte.Zeddedhed":38nvpbba said:I don't have enough knowledge of how wood moves to come up with anything other than a normal table top.
For a table destined for external use the ideal timber is air dried stuff at about 16- 22% MC because this will be fairly close to the MC it will experience in service. I imagine the proposed sapele has been kiln dried and is hovering somewhere near 10 - 12% MC. This is okay as long as you allow for the inevitable cross grain expansion during construction. Personally I'd avoid the dominos for the joinery because I'd want to mechanically lock the joints with something like draw-boring a tenon on the end of one member into the mortice of its partner, which I think would be very hard to replicate with a domino.Zeddedhed":3qyejq80 said:OK. I get the concept, and not too difficult to do. I'll be using an epoxy resin and dominos so that should be fine.
I suspect you've been lucky more than anything else. I would never recommend such a construction for an exterior table top, nor would I agree to make one like that, unless the client was willing to accept all responsibility. The problem with that sort of arrangement is the client usually forgets what they've agreed to and bad-mouths the maker anyway when things go wrong, which is not good for the maker's reputation or business. This kind of thing can happen even if the arrangement is in writing and signed by the client.Zeddedhed":3qyejq80 said:What is the reason for it pulling itself apart though? I've got a conventional tabletop outside made from Oak glued up with epoxy and domino's together thats been outside for three years and is still tight as a drum. It looks a bit tatty but the joints between boards (and the BB end) are still fine.
Make the mortice about 2 to 4% longer than the width of the tenon, e.g., 100 mm wide tenon leads to a mortice ~ 102 - 104 mm long. This assumes your wood is kiln dried, therefore probably at something like 12% MC, and likely to expand widthways quite a bit after the table is made and placed outside. A single draw-bore should be sufficient, although you could use two in a tenon the size I've described, set fairly close together. Install the trunnels from the underside but stop them short of the top surface by 6 or so mm. That's one less place for surface water to get in, which would add to the causes of wood deterioration. Slainte.Zeddedhed":1p22vxad said:Would it be best then to oversize the mortices (hidden behind shoulders of tenons) to allow for expansion or just the usual tight fit and draw bore them?
Enter your email address to join: