What's everyone's thoughts on using metal braces on large widths of worktops?
I've had a pine top bow on a piece I made about a year ago now. Luckily it is just a personal piece. It's made from 20mm PSE redwood, a width of about 400mm front to back and about a meter wide. It's bowed about 4mm up at the front over the 400mm.
My personal thoughts are that the wood wasn't sufficiently dry when it was milled and joined together and the top has dried more than the base which has caused it to bow. I'm going to be making another one from 36mm rough sawn milled down to around 30mm thickness and router in a channel for some 5mm flat bar underneath with some oval slots in to allow for expansion and contraction of the wood, then put in a threaded screw through the oval hole in the flat bar into an insert nut in the wood.
What's everyone else's preferred method for making worktops?
I have made a fair few before but usually from more stable hardwoods such as euro oak which haven't moved at all. Perhaps it's just because it's pine and tends to move a fair bit anyway.
Thanks, Designer 1
I've had a pine top bow on a piece I made about a year ago now. Luckily it is just a personal piece. It's made from 20mm PSE redwood, a width of about 400mm front to back and about a meter wide. It's bowed about 4mm up at the front over the 400mm.
My personal thoughts are that the wood wasn't sufficiently dry when it was milled and joined together and the top has dried more than the base which has caused it to bow. I'm going to be making another one from 36mm rough sawn milled down to around 30mm thickness and router in a channel for some 5mm flat bar underneath with some oval slots in to allow for expansion and contraction of the wood, then put in a threaded screw through the oval hole in the flat bar into an insert nut in the wood.
What's everyone else's preferred method for making worktops?
I have made a fair few before but usually from more stable hardwoods such as euro oak which haven't moved at all. Perhaps it's just because it's pine and tends to move a fair bit anyway.
Thanks, Designer 1