AJB Temple
Finely figured
I have been asked to make a work surface Island top 3m by 1.2m that is to a specific architectural specification. Which is as follows.
Top in 1" rock maple. Very high quality hand selected (by me) boards, various widths but mostly about 200mm wide or a bit more. all at about 8%. I bought them sawn and they have already been thicknessed and edged by me. Dead flat and currently acclimatising in the room where they will end up.
Edge jointed with dominos.
Entire work surface glued to 25mm marine ply.
The whole lot edged with dominoes and glued Wenge (again - top notch stuff, selected by me. I have some very wide boards. Eye wateringly expensive even with trade bulk discount).
Epoxy finish.
I have no issues with making the work surface (which might get reduced to 2.5 metres long - there are in fact two of them) but I am a tad worried about glueing to the plywood. The architect (who is a well respected chap) says this is his preferred method, as in his past experience it has achieved great stability. I am a bit worried about the maple moving about and cracks appearing.
There is no guarantee exposure or anything like that - I just want to make sure we are not making a bad decision, and do the best job. He is not a dogmatic man, and will listen to reason. These are expensive worktops needless to say (will end up costing more that granite or quartz).
Any thoughts would be appreciated. I am not a professional joiner making a living from this. The architect has been a good friend for 30 years and he is going to work with me as he wants to have a hand in his own build. We are helping each other on our respective house refurbishments.
Thanks, AJ
Top in 1" rock maple. Very high quality hand selected (by me) boards, various widths but mostly about 200mm wide or a bit more. all at about 8%. I bought them sawn and they have already been thicknessed and edged by me. Dead flat and currently acclimatising in the room where they will end up.
Edge jointed with dominos.
Entire work surface glued to 25mm marine ply.
The whole lot edged with dominoes and glued Wenge (again - top notch stuff, selected by me. I have some very wide boards. Eye wateringly expensive even with trade bulk discount).
Epoxy finish.
I have no issues with making the work surface (which might get reduced to 2.5 metres long - there are in fact two of them) but I am a tad worried about glueing to the plywood. The architect (who is a well respected chap) says this is his preferred method, as in his past experience it has achieved great stability. I am a bit worried about the maple moving about and cracks appearing.
There is no guarantee exposure or anything like that - I just want to make sure we are not making a bad decision, and do the best job. He is not a dogmatic man, and will listen to reason. These are expensive worktops needless to say (will end up costing more that granite or quartz).
Any thoughts would be appreciated. I am not a professional joiner making a living from this. The architect has been a good friend for 30 years and he is going to work with me as he wants to have a hand in his own build. We are helping each other on our respective house refurbishments.
Thanks, AJ