a

08/11/2006 9:06 AM

What is this type of board and where can I buy it?

Hi,

I saw a table with a surface that I liked and I took a picture with my
phone:


http://i.math.drexel.edu/~pg/board.jpg

What is this type of board called?
Where can I buy it?
Does the inhomogeneity tend to cause problems?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude


This topic has 8 replies

Gr

"Gus"

in reply to [email protected] on 08/11/2006 9:06 AM

08/11/2006 9:19 AM



On Nov 8, 12:06 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I saw a table with a surface that I liked and I took a picture with my
> phone:
>
> http://i.math.drexel.edu/~pg/board.jpg
>
> What is this type of board called?
> Where can I buy it?
> Does the inhomogeneity tend to cause problems?
>


Hard to tell without being able to examine it up close, but it looks
like oak and/or maple and/or walnut strip flooring.

Perhaps similar to this:

http://www.elmwoodreclaimedtimber.com/FileUploads/con29.jpg

If that is, in fact, the case, it should be stable enough.

a

in reply to [email protected] on 08/11/2006 9:06 AM

08/11/2006 10:26 AM

Thanks for the replies.

Actually it's not flooring, but more of a countertop. The strips are
less than 1" apart.

With that extra information... Does it have a name and a place to buy
it?

Thanks!

Rr

"RicodJour"

in reply to [email protected] on 08/11/2006 9:06 AM

08/11/2006 1:29 PM

[email protected] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I saw a table with a surface that I liked and I took a picture with my
> phone:
>
>
> http://i.math.drexel.edu/~pg/board.jpg
>
> What is this type of board called?
> Where can I buy it?
> Does the inhomogeneity tend to cause problems?

Inhomogeneity...? The heterogeneous natures of the wood could cause
some issues with the natural expansion and contraction wood experiences
with the normal changes in humidity. Wood species have different
coefficients of expansion, also dependent on how the wood is oriented.
If you used the same wood species in each row there shouldn't be a
problem beyond the usual with those sort of glue ups.

I don't know of any source for such a conglomeration of woods.
Non-matched "scrap" woods litter...errr, grace every woodworker's shop.
Giving one an excuse to use some of it up and earn some money would
probably be well received.

R

CM

"Charlie M. 1958"

in reply to [email protected] on 08/11/2006 9:06 AM

08/11/2006 11:34 AM

[email protected] wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I saw a table with a surface that I liked and I took a picture with my
> phone:
>
>
> http://i.math.drexel.edu/~pg/board.jpg
>
> What is this type of board called?
> Where can I buy it?
> Does the inhomogeneity tend to cause problems?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Aaron Fude
>

Looks like politicianwood to me - can't decide what it wants to look
like, tries to be all things to all people, and every time you cut a new
board from it you get a different shading. Its main characteristics are
extreme weakness and poor workability. Best suited for firewood.

JB

Jim Behning

in reply to [email protected] on 08/11/2006 9:06 AM

09/11/2006 2:04 AM

On 8 Nov 2006 10:26:23 -0800, [email protected] wrote:

>Thanks for the replies.
>
>Actually it's not flooring, but more of a countertop. The strips are
>less than 1" apart.
>
>With that extra information... Does it have a name and a place to buy
>it?
>
>Thanks!
www.craft-art.com will make you something like that for a bunch of
money. Well actually I do not know how expensive it is. They glue
stuff together, plane it and sand it, cnc route it, finish sand and
finish it. Dusty shop they have but the finish room is clean enough to
get a nice finish. A computer account of mine.

ee

"efgh"

in reply to [email protected] on 08/11/2006 9:06 AM

08/11/2006 5:38 PM


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi,
>
> I saw a table with a surface that I liked and I took a picture with my
> phone:
>
>
> http://i.math.drexel.edu/~pg/board.jpg
>
> What is this type of board called?
> Where can I buy it?
> Does the inhomogeneity tend to cause problems?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Aaron Fude
>
It looks like a cutting board with various types of wood, possibly walnut,
cherry, and maple perhaps?

Jj

"Jim"

in reply to [email protected] on 08/11/2006 9:06 AM

08/11/2006 9:03 PM


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Thanks for the replies.
>
> Actually it's not flooring, but more of a countertop. The strips are
> less than 1" apart.
>
> With that extra information... Does it have a name and a place to buy
> it?
>
>
What extra information? It seems to be a counter top which was made by edge
gluing boards of various kinds together.
You may find someone at a cabinet shop who would sell something like that.
Otherwise, just get the wood and get to gluing.
Jim

Dd

"DanG"

in reply to [email protected] on 08/11/2006 9:06 AM

08/11/2006 7:13 PM

This is not a true end grain, old meat market type butcher block,
but Formica has sold that pattern as butcher block for over a
score of years. It is probably edge grain maple which can run to
many colors.

I hope this helps. There are some people who make counters of old
bowling alley lanes. Same/similar effect.

There are several manufacturers and sources of workbench tops.
Grainger's is one that sells hardwoood tops.
___________________________
Keep the whole world singing. . . .
DanG


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi,
>
> I saw a table with a surface that I liked and I took a picture
> with my
> phone:
>
>
> http://i.math.drexel.edu/~pg/board.jpg
>
> What is this type of board called?
> Where can I buy it?
> Does the inhomogeneity tend to cause problems?
>
> Thanks!
>
> Aaron Fude
>


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