On Feb 3, 12:57 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have some Douglas Fir I'd like to use to make a cutting board. Good
> idea? Bad idea?
So-so idea. Not so bad as something porous like oak, not nearly as
good as something fine-grained and relatively hard like maple...
> > I have some Douglas Fir I'd like to use to make a cutting board. Good
> > idea? Bad idea?
>
> > TIA,
> > NL
>
> A bit tooooooooo soft.
Theoretically, probably too soft. Realistically, probably fine, as
long as you don't expect it to last many generations. I know maple
etc. are supposed to be the best cutting board woods, but my parents
used a "cutting board" for 10+ years that I made in jr. high shop
class. This "cutting board" was a square piece of CX plywood. It
used to have 3/4" dowels countersunk into it as legs, but those fell
off almost immediately after they started using it (now I know the
countersink was far too shallow, and gluing end grain doesn't have any
strength...). My point is that CX ply isn't ideal cutting board
material, but it was functional.
My advice - make your cutting board, use it, and learn whatever you
can from the process. If you at some point get some maple, walnut,
and/or cherry scraps, make a new cutting board (any combination of
those woods is beautiful).
Assuming you're gluing up pieces, I'd definitely use something
waterproof like titebond 3, gorilla glue, or epoxy. They're all "food
safe" once they cure. Use mineral oil as a finish - you don't want
something that hardens, as that could chip as you use it.
Good luck and have fun,
Andy
As long as your pieces have straight clear grain and no knots it's okay.
Probably better for cheese than for red meat. Flood the surface with
mineral oil -- all it will take. Should last you for years.
J.
[email protected] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have some Douglas Fir I'd like to use to make a cutting board. Good
> idea? Bad idea?
[email protected] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have some Douglas Fir I'd like to use to make a cutting board. Good
> idea? Bad idea?
>
> TIA,
> NL
>
I would suggest that a hard Maple be used for many reasons already
mentioned. The actual cost of wood in a small project like this is
very little compared to the build time and the use that you would
expect from the project.
I have made spoons, spatulas and stirring items out of maple and
have never used any oil or finish on them.
Good luck
Norvin
In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] wrote:
>I have some Douglas Fir I'd like to use to make a cutting board. Good
>idea? Bad idea?
Bad idea. Real bad. Cutting boards should be made from hard, tight-grained
woods that won't impart any taste to the food. Douglas fir fails all three
specifications.
--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)
It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi,
>
> I have some Douglas Fir I'd like to use to make a cutting board. Good
> idea? Bad idea?
>
> TIA,
> NL
>
A bit tooooooooo soft.