On 6/16/2016 8:01 AM, Scott Lurndal wrote:
> Electric Comet <[email protected]> writes:
>>
>> i do twenty four hours or more
>
> Good for you. Most smart people read the label on
> the adhesive container and follow the instructions
> for clamping time.
>
I have 5 different Titebond glues, none are the polyurethane type.
All say a minimum of 30 minutes or 30~45 minutes clamping time and not
to stress the joint for 24 hours.
A longer clamping time than recommended does not hurt but probably adds
little to no benefit.
Electric Comet <[email protected]> writes:
>
>i do twenty four hours or more
Good for you. Most smart people read the label on
the adhesive container and follow the instructions
for clamping time.
>>
>>i do twenty four hours or more
>
>Good for you. Most smart people read the label on
>the adhesive container and follow the instructions
>for clamping time.
If you click on the " Tech " link on the web page below -
it takes you to a couple of handy reference charts.
http://www.leevalley.com/en/Wood/page.aspx?p=45104&cat=1,110,42965&ap=1
John T.
"Electric Comet" wrote in message news:[email protected]...
i do twenty four hours or more
overnight is top vote getter
http://www.thewoodwhisperer.com/poll/poll-how-long-before-removing-clamps/
guess overnight means twelve hours or so
Just a hobbyist but I've done doors and drawers for two kitchens (30 to 40
doors and 15 - 20 drawers each) and I've only ever waited the 30 minutes
using Titebond. I simply didn't have that many clamps to wait overnight. I
setup a large 4'x8' work table (torsion top on saw horses) in my garage and
went into production mode. Stacks of rails and stiles and raised panels at
one end.
Layout pieces for door on table, inspect joints, apply glue, tap panel
together, clamp and check for square. Set aside to dry. With 4 sets of
clamps I would do a door approx. every 10 to 15 minutes. I was able to
continue the whole process until done over a 2 day period without running
out of clamps and having to wait. After 15 minutes, I would go back to the
last glue-up and scrape off any squeeze out while semi-soft and hit with a
damp rag.
Granted, they sat overnight before any further work was done. Fresh glue,
tight joints and know in advance (dry run practice) how you are going to do
the glue-up. ( a 7' long pantry door taught me that - real quick....)
Bob S.
On Wed, 15 Jun 2016 22:41:38 -0400
"Bob" <[email protected]> wrote:
> to 40 doors and 15 - 20 drawers each) and I've only ever waited the
> 30 minutes using Titebond. I simply didn't have that many clamps to
from the poll looks to be about 20% of others that wait the same time
> wait overnight. I setup a large 4'x8' work table (torsion top on saw
> horses) in my garage and went into production mode. Stacks of rails
i need to make a torsion top but i have to figure out how to make a
foldable one to be out of the way
or maybe sectional instead of foldable using detachable hinges