Hey guys, new to woodworking, I own a store and I built a decorative deposit
box on the inside of my office door with a mailslot on the other side.
The box turned out great, however after a couple of weeks, the door on the
box warped and would no longer close right, it also looks like the sides
drew in. I sanded the top of the door down so it would close and restained,
however it no longer looks as nice as it did when I first finished it. I
used large peices of laminated pine from home depot (24" x 36", 3/4" thick)
and used a minwax gel stain after cutting but prior to assembling.
I plan on building some additional cabinets, and I am curious what I can do
to minimize this problem in the future?
Any advice is appreciated, thanks!
I'll bet the issue is "the mail slot on the other side." Perhaps
letting in moisture from outside?
I wonder if something laminated like plywood would be a better bet?
Thoughts from the group?
BTW, the advice for the latches for the table leaves someone suggested
works great. Put them on last night. That sucker will never come apart
in the middle of a dinner party again!
Be sure to finish your work inside and out so that all sides are
sealed, not just the outside. Leave your stock in the workshop for a
couple of weeks so that it gets used to being indoors. (The moisture
content can stabilize.) Attach battens (cross pieces) to the underside
of boards that are not supported on all four sides.
Just a few thoughts.
Bill
Locutus wrote:
> "professorpaul" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > I'll bet the issue is "the mail slot on the other side." Perhaps
> > letting in moisture from outside?
> >
>
> Sorry, I should have been more clear, its an interior office door, not an
> exterior door. The moisture should be the same on both sides.
>
> Thanks.
You might buy yourself a moisture meter to see how dry the wood is.
Also, it can be good to mill the wood just slightly larger than final,
let it sit, then mill again to final dimensions. That way it will warp
as it dries to final (well not really 'final' but much drier) moisture
content, and when you mill it again to final dimensions, you have much
more stable and once again square stock.
Even if you let it sit and it's not close to final dimensions, when you
cut it (especially if you resaw) it may then warp because it's moister
in the center than at the outside.
You might also choose a more stable (though of course more expensive)
hardwood like cherry or walnut instead of pine.
>How can you know if lumber is kiln dried?
As odinn said, it's hard to know since it may have been rained on. The
independany lumber mills I've seen keep the wood in sheds after it's
been through the kiln.
Most construction type lumber at the big box stores, this would include
things like cedar or the bigger 2x10 or 2x12 boards, is S-dry. This
means that it's dry but not really that dry. I'm sure that someone can
chime in with percentages. S-dry isn't really green, but it's still
wet enough to warp. The s4s oak boards you see there, and the boards
next to it are probably kiln dried, although they may still warp.
brian
"professorpaul" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I'll bet the issue is "the mail slot on the other side." Perhaps
> letting in moisture from outside?
>
Sorry, I should have been more clear, its an interior office door, not an
exterior door. The moisture should be the same on both sides.
Thanks.
"brianlanning" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> >I used large peices of laminated pine from home depot
>
> It wasn't dry. Or rather, it was less dry than the room where you put
> it. It warped as it dried. In the future, you'll want to use kild
> dried lumber for this reason. There's not much you can do about it
> now.
>
> brian
>
Thanks, I thought that might be the case. It's not a big deal on this piece,
but I want to prevent it in the future. How can you know if lumber is kiln
dried? I didn't see any such thing at Lowes or HD.
"Locutus" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hey guys, new to woodworking, I own a store and I built a decorative
deposit
> box on the inside of my office door with a mailslot on the other side.
A picture posted to ABPW would help a bit.
....
> used large peices of laminated pine from home depot (24" x 36", 3/4"
thick)
> and used a minwax gel stain after cutting but prior to assembling.
Laminted pine will behave more or less like a lingle slab of pine. unequal
exposure to moisture/relative humidity will cause it to cup. You can
mitigate this coating *both inside and out* the stained wood with poly or
some other film finish. (spar varninsh would be better for an exterior
application).
Frame and panel construction rather than a single slab would be much less
prone to warping. (Individual pieces of pine will warp just as much, but F&P
construction does not make wood movement "errors" cumulative)
-Steve
Attach battens (cross pieces) to the underside
> of boards that are not supported on all four sides.
I think that's dangerous advice. A batton across 24" of wood shouldn't be
secured across the grain without allowing for some movement (like slotted
screw holes on the ends). To simply glue a batton of that length, across the
grain is not good practice.
-Steve
On 2/9/2006 4:40 PM Locutus mumbled something about the following:
> "brianlanning" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>> I used large peices of laminated pine from home depot
>> It wasn't dry. Or rather, it was less dry than the room where you put
>> it. It warped as it dried. In the future, you'll want to use kild
>> dried lumber for this reason. There's not much you can do about it
>> now.
>>
>> brian
>>
>
> Thanks, I thought that might be the case. It's not a big deal on this piece,
> but I want to prevent it in the future. How can you know if lumber is kiln
> dried? I didn't see any such thing at Lowes or HD.
>
>
If you bought it at Lowe's or HD, it may have been kiln dried, but I've
seen their lumber sit out in the rain for a week (usually just a tarp to
keep it from being rained directly on) before even being brought in.
For construction lumber, this isn't too bad (it's not good though), but
for building cabinets and such, you want it to be very dry, especially
if it's going inside where the air is conditioned, before you start
working with it.
--
Odinn
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