LoveMonkey
Established Member
- Joined
- 4 Dec 2019
- Messages
- 30
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Good evening.
I have been quite busy recently accumulating pallet wood to have a go at a couple of things for the workshop and garden. I have a couple of questions:
1. I plan on ripping the wood to thickness and gluing it face to face to get the widths of panel I need for each project. In some instances this will leave nail holes in the glued up faces. Is it necessary to fill these where they won't be seen between the joins? I have seen reference to air in gaps of glue ups causing cracks and I'm not sure if this is true.
2. Given that I will be glueing up panels from all different types of wood, will the fact they will expand and contract at different rates cause issues later down the line? Is there anything that can be done about it, or should I try to use the same kind of wood in any given panel?
3. With the first lot of wood I have cut it into smaller pieces, squared up a face and edge and then sent the other side through the thicknesser so I have flat, square sections of wood. I haven't ripped the other edge yet. I'll do that when I need to use it. This has been quite time consuming and I lose quite a lot of wood on some pieces. I have seen videos online where people have just run both sides through a thicknesser without squaring them up and then straightened them out with pressure whilst gluing them together. This would be a lot quicker, but would this lead to trouble down the line by adding tension into the resulting panels?
Thank you
I have been quite busy recently accumulating pallet wood to have a go at a couple of things for the workshop and garden. I have a couple of questions:
1. I plan on ripping the wood to thickness and gluing it face to face to get the widths of panel I need for each project. In some instances this will leave nail holes in the glued up faces. Is it necessary to fill these where they won't be seen between the joins? I have seen reference to air in gaps of glue ups causing cracks and I'm not sure if this is true.
2. Given that I will be glueing up panels from all different types of wood, will the fact they will expand and contract at different rates cause issues later down the line? Is there anything that can be done about it, or should I try to use the same kind of wood in any given panel?
3. With the first lot of wood I have cut it into smaller pieces, squared up a face and edge and then sent the other side through the thicknesser so I have flat, square sections of wood. I haven't ripped the other edge yet. I'll do that when I need to use it. This has been quite time consuming and I lose quite a lot of wood on some pieces. I have seen videos online where people have just run both sides through a thicknesser without squaring them up and then straightened them out with pressure whilst gluing them together. This would be a lot quicker, but would this lead to trouble down the line by adding tension into the resulting panels?
Thank you