Cabinet Help [message #36039] |
Fri, 19 April 2002 13:41 |
SteveBrown
Messages: 330 Registered: May 2009
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Grand Master |
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Well, I'm about dive into these pi things... I'm planning on the Thermionic 3pi and I'm wondering about the woodworking. I've made lots of other speaker enclosures but I find consistent problems. Maybe it's because I'm too focused on making furniture, rather than an enclosure. I'd like to use a nice hardwood finish (Plywood or veneer). Here are my concerns and I'd love to get your helpful hints: 1. hardwood plywood is very expensive, one miss cut and it's big $. If I use plywood I'll have to put a miter on the corners. I have a table saw but somehow I never get those miters to come out just perfectly. Help? 2. If I go MDF with a veneer, I've had some problems with bubbles under the veneer (paper backed applied w/contact cement). It always looks flat after I roller it, but the bubbles appear after a day or two. Help? 3. Overall, which do you all prefer and why? 4. Last, from a design standpoint, I'm kind of thinking about maple around the sides and walnut for the baffle. Thoughts? Thanks for the help. Steve
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Re: Cabinet Help [message #36043 is a reply to message #36042] |
Fri, 19 April 2002 20:08 |
SteveBrown
Messages: 330 Registered: May 2009
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Grand Master |
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Thanks for the advice! It sounds like you're suggesting putting banding on the exposed plywood edges and then using butt joints? I've seen that done with some bookcases and other furniture. You also said, "you might try leaving the edgeing corners proud of the casework for an architectural look" I'm not sure I follow this one. Can you expand on this a bit? Last, if I do decide to miter the cornes, I seem to remember that there are router bits that can do this, and some that even make locking joints, any experience using these? Are they accurate? Thanks! Steve
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Another point to wory about. [message #36044 is a reply to message #36039] |
Sat, 20 April 2002 02:56 |
Erik from Holland
Messages: 36 Registered: May 2009
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Baron |
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If i would buy a nice plywood sheet with fineer, i would have another problem. If you would make a joint connection, the only way to let the fineer reach eachother in the edges is to make a cold diagonal joint. Otherwise, the fineer would stop a few millimeters for the edge, depending on the type of joint you choose.So, whats best, first make a enclosure and fineer it later, or buy a already finered sheet? Greetingzzz, Eirikr.
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Re: Another point to wory about. [message #36049 is a reply to message #36044] |
Sat, 20 April 2002 15:17 |
bmar
Messages: 346 Registered: May 2009
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Grand Master |
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A few simple ways that you could do it would be to use fineered ply for the sides and have that come up to a 25mm square solid wood for the corners. use fineer ply and glue an edge fineer on all edges before assembling and finally, just fineer the whole box after you build it from MDF. there are lots of ways. none are better than the other. do what is easy for you and also what you have tools to use. ciao
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