Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time? I
was also thinking of doing it in a binary fashion - glue 2 together, and
join that piece to another set of two that were glued up, and so on.
Thanks for any advice.
"Buck Turgidson" wrote:
> Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
> best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time?
It all depends.
It is a function of how long are the boards, or stated another way, the
length of the glue lines.
How fast can you work?
Do you have a helper?
Are you limited by available work space?
As I said, it all depends.
Lew
On 2008-03-01 15:54:31 -0500, "dadiOH" <[email protected]> said:
> Phisherman wrote:
>> On Sat, 1 Mar 2008 13:43:15 -0500, "Buck Turgidson"
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up,
>>> what's the best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at
>>> once, or one at time? I was also thinking of doing it in a binary
>>> fashion - glue 2 together, and join that piece to another set of
>>> two that were glued up, and so on.
>>>
>>> Thanks for any advice.
>>>
>>
>> If there is a lot, gluing them up in smaller sets might be less
>> stressful. The secret to success is keeping the entire assembly
>> flat so take some extra effort to make sure.
If you glue them up in "sets" in a series of steps, just make sure, in
subsequent glue-ups, that the places on the edges of the boards where
the clamps bear don't get squashed/deformed from the clamping pressure.
If they do, you'll want to restore a straight, flat, square edge for
gluing with a plane or jointer or saw.
Good luck.
Sat, Mar 1, 2008, 1:43pm [email protected] (Buck=A0Turgidson) doth
burble:
Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time?
I was also thinking of doing it in a binary fashion - glue 2 together,
and join that piece to another set of two that were glued up, and so on.
Thanks for any advice.
That'll work. You're welcome.
JOAT
10 Out Of 10 Terrorists Prefer Hillary For President - Bumper Sticker
I do not have a problem with a woman president - except for Hillary.
On Mar 1, 12:43=A0pm, "Buck Turgidson" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
> best way to proceed? =A0Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time?=
=A0I
> was also thinking of doing it in a binary fashion - glue 2 together, and
> join that piece to another set of two that were glued up, and so on.
>
> Thanks for any advice.
Don't forget to pay attention to the grain pattern on the ENDS of the
boards. The end grain should alternate, concave up/concave down. I
once glued up a 48 inch wide panel, paying close attention to how the
grain looked on the surface, but ignoring the end grain. Just so
happened I had nearly all the boards with the grain running the same
way. When that piece went through its first winter, it looked like I
had tried to build a barrel.
DonkeyHody
"Of all the lessons I've learned, I remember best the ones I learned
the hard way."
Buck Turgidson wrote:
> Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
> best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time? I
> was also thinking of doing it in a binary fashion - glue 2 together, and
> join that piece to another set of two that were glued up, and so on.
>
> Thanks for any advice.
I've always glued panels one board at a time (i.e. one wet glue line
at any given time). It's obviously the slowest way, but in my opinion
it's the easiest and since I only build things for fun, it doesn't
matter to me if it takes an extra evening or two to get everything
glued. Your binary way would be faster and just as easy as my way
assuming you always had two sets gluing at once which obviously
requires twice as many clamps.
Charles
"Buck Turgidson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
> best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time?
> I was also thinking of doing it in a binary fashion - glue 2 together, and
> join that piece to another set of two that were glued up, and so on.
>
> Thanks for any advice.
>
The last time I did a big table top I glued the center (2-4) then glue 2 on
each side at a time.
--
www.garagewoodworks.com
"Buck Turgidson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
> best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time?
I
> was also thinking of doing it in a binary fashion - glue 2 together, and
> join that piece to another set of two that were glued up, and so on.
>
> Thanks for any advice.
>
>
You haven't said how you want to glue them together ---- if edge to edge, I
would glue as many together as would fit in my clamps or that I could spread
glue on and clamp in about 5 minutes or less. If the clamps wouldn't hold
them all at one time then I would divide them into several groups and glue
up one group at a time, then make up a jig or other clamping method to put
the already glued groups together into one big assembly.
It all depends what you have to work with and what you are making. When I
build a table top or flat panel I follow the above method. When I'm making
the frame/leg assembly I glue the two end assemblies together and then
connect them together front and back in a second glue-up. You have to
pre-plan each glue-up based on many factors, clamping ability and time are
the most important. Do a dry fit of all the pieces first to be sure that
everything fits together and that you have everything you will need at hand
before you start with the glue.
Charley
"Buck Turgidson" <[email protected]> writes:
> Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
> best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time?
Untested, but you can also drill some alignment holes first. And bolt
the table with long thread rod. That way when you glue it up, you
minimize the jaggies. One glue-up should do it.
Dry clamp them first. Go through the entire process without glue to
check your setup. Do that no matter which way you plan to proceed.
Phisherman wrote:
> On Sat, 1 Mar 2008 13:43:15 -0500, "Buck Turgidson"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up,
>> what's the best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at
>> once, or one at time? I was also thinking of doing it in a binary
>> fashion - glue 2 together, and join that piece to another set of
>> two that were glued up, and so on.
>>
>> Thanks for any advice.
>>
>
> If there is a lot, gluing them up in smaller sets might be less
> stressful. The secret to success is keeping the entire assembly
> flat so take some extra effort to make sure.
And keeping them flat means equalizing pressure by putting clamps on
BOTH sides. Check surface with a straight edge, tweak clamp pressure
as needed.
--
dadiOH
____________________________
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On Sat, 1 Mar 2008 13:43:15 -0500, "Buck Turgidson"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
>best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time? I
>was also thinking of doing it in a binary fashion - glue 2 together, and
>join that piece to another set of two that were glued up, and so on.
>
>Thanks for any advice.
>
If there is a lot, gluing them up in smaller sets might be less
stressful. The secret to success is keeping the entire assembly flat
so take some extra effort to make sure.
On Sat, 1 Mar 2008 13:43:15 -0500, "Buck Turgidson"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Assuming I've jointed several 1 x 4s prior to gluing them up, what's the
>best way to proceed? Should I glue them up all at once, or one at time? I
>was also thinking of doing it in a binary fashion - glue 2 together, and
>join that piece to another set of two that were glued up, and so on.
>
>Thanks for any advice.
I usually do as many as I can comfortably do during the open time of
the glue. At face, that may sound like a silly answer, but it really
can vary from project to project. Shorter parts need less attention
and clamps, so I can attend to them better before the glue dries, and
therefore do more joints at once.
My suggestion is to do a practice run without glue, the best number of
boards will show itself to you.