Hi folks,
I am biddig on a job to build a 72" wide rolltop desk, which will need a
tambour in athe 68" wide range. None of my noremal suppliers have them that
big. Does anyone know of a supplier that does?
if not, has anyone ever tried to build one themselves? how much of a hassle
was it?
any tips or suggestions appreciated.
thanks
--JD
New World Magic Woodworks
jd wrote:
> Hi folks,
> I am biddig on a job to build a 72" wide rolltop desk, which will need a
> tambour in athe 68" wide range. None of my noremal suppliers have them that
> big. Does anyone know of a supplier that does?
> if not, has anyone ever tried to build one themselves? how much of a hassle
> was it?
> any tips or suggestions appreciated.
> thanks
> --JD
> New World Magic Woodworks
>
>
Hmmm - I saw some, not sure the size, but big. Furniture maker passed
and wife was selling his stuff. Al that was left was some wood, a
grinder, several tambours and a few odds and ends. IN SE PA. Let me know
if you want the number.
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jd wrote:
> Hi folks,
> I am biddig on a job to build a 72" wide rolltop desk, which will need a
> tambour in athe 68" wide range. None of my noremal suppliers have them that
> big. Does anyone know of a supplier that does?
> if not, has anyone ever tried to build one themselves? how much of a hassle
> was it?
> any tips or suggestions appreciated.
> thanks
> --JD
> New World Magic Woodworks
>
>
Norm did it with canvas and contact glue on new yankie workshop IIRC
Easy to build your own. But, a wide tambour will really want to bind.
Also, some subtle points to consider...(for instance the tambour does not
ride on the shoulders of the tenon, it rides on the bottom of the tenon).
Other than that they are cheaper to build yourself and the results are
better.
"jd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi folks,
> I am biddig on a job to build a 72" wide rolltop desk, which will need a
> tambour in athe 68" wide range. None of my noremal suppliers have them
> that big. Does anyone know of a supplier that does?
> if not, has anyone ever tried to build one themselves? how much of a
> hassle was it?
> any tips or suggestions appreciated.
> thanks
> --JD
> New World Magic Woodworks
>
Jody wrote:
> jd wrote:
>
>> Hi folks,
>> I am biddig on a job to build a 72" wide rolltop desk, which will need
>> a tambour in athe 68" wide range. None of my noremal suppliers have
>> them that big. Does anyone know of a supplier that does?
>> if not, has anyone ever tried to build one themselves? how much of a
>> hassle was it?
>> any tips or suggestions appreciated.
>> thanks
>> --JD
>> New World Magic Woodworks
>>
> I make them all the time for bread boxes but not that big. I would not
> see problems with one that big. Just make sure you use a good quality
> canvas. I lay the canvas down on some MDF. Nail a strip of wood down on
> the edge. Pull the canvas tight and nail the other side to the MDF. Then
> glue the tambours down tight against the nailed strip. That will keep
> everything aligned.
I forgot to add. I use a 2-Piece Tambour Door Bit Sets I got from
pricecutter. At the time I only planned to make a few. I might have
gotten a little higher quality bit set.
On Tue, 13 Jun 2006 21:44:12 GMT, "TAF"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Easy to build your own. But, a wide tambour will really want to bind.
>Also, some subtle points to consider...(for instance the tambour does not
>ride on the shoulders of the tenon, it rides on the bottom of the tenon).
>Other than that they are cheaper to build yourself and the results are
>better.
Wouldn't some sort of plastic roller-bearing on each end piece work
here?
I guess it'd make the thing a bit more expensive though.
jd wrote:
> Hi folks,
> I am biddig on a job to build a 72" wide rolltop desk, which will need a
> tambour in athe 68" wide range. None of my noremal suppliers have them that
> big. Does anyone know of a supplier that does?
> if not, has anyone ever tried to build one themselves? how much of a hassle
> was it?
> any tips or suggestions appreciated.
> thanks
> --JD
> New World Magic Woodworks
>
>
I make them all the time for bread boxes but not that big. I would not
see problems with one that big. Just make sure you use a good quality
canvas. I lay the canvas down on some MDF. Nail a strip of wood down on
the edge. Pull the canvas tight and nail the other side to the MDF. Then
glue the tambours down tight against the nailed strip. That will keep
everything aligned.