Posts: 676
Threads: 2
Joined: Jan 2007
Start clamping in the middle and work your way to the edges. Don't do the whole glue up at once.
Posts: 24,145
Threads: 2
Joined: Sep 2003
Location: Missouri
Not familiar with what plan you have, but for creep...
Very small brad/brads barely drove into one piece, then clip them off real short.
When clamped up, they will embed themselves into the wood pieces.
Steve
Mo.
I miss the days of using my dinghy with a girlfriend too. Zack Butler-4/18/24
The Revos apparently are designed to clamp railroad ties and pull together horrifically prepared joints
WaterlooMark 02/9/2020
Posts: 1,172
Threads: 0
Joined: Dec 2007
Some of the more serious bent laminations I have done used forms with outrigger/rails, which support the lamination stack at the bottom edge, this allows side clamping to avoid/reduce side slippage. obviously use packing tape or wax to avoid your form becoming a permanent part of your treasured piece. I have seen tape cuffs around the ends of the stack (sticky side out, let the laminations slide the way they are supposed to slide as they bend to the form, but control side slipping. and thirdly, dimension stock to accommodate some slippage and joint/saw/rasp/drawknive/spokeshave the errant laminations back to the herd.
Ray Knight
Posts: 507
Threads: 0
Joined: Jul 2013
Thanks for the replies.
I'm going to try the tape cuff on the second one.
Posts: 507
Threads: 0
Joined: Jul 2013
Ray, thanks for mentioning outriggers. Gave me an idea. I moved the base of the form so it canteleivered over the end of the bench, and used my biggest C clamps to push the tops of the pieces into alignment as I clamped the curve.
No I just hope I didn't introduce a twist?
Posts: 2,273
Threads: 3
Joined: Feb 2005
Location: Central America
I would try to incorporate a top edge so they can't ride up. I think that's been suggested. You may also check that the back and front of your clamp faces are parallel or try to have the clamp at a slight angle such that it pulls the top laminate downwards when you tighten it.
Posts: 13,485
Threads: 0
Joined: Oct 1999
I learned laminating curved parts making spiral staircases, and episodes 3-4 of my show will feature a Library Stand with bent wood laminations. (Episode 3 available in early August)
I mill my strips at least 1/8" wider than the final width of the parts, more as the stack gets larger.
I use stretch wrap to "Clamp" the stack together once the glue is added. I wrap the ends on all stacks and maybe one or two spots along the length for longer glue ups.
This tends to keep things mostly aligned during glue up, but you ALWAYS must plan on the layers skewing a bit, which is why you leave things wide and mill down after gluing.
Posts: 589
Threads: 0
Joined: Jan 2017
Location: Marina del Rey
(07-20-2017, 08:56 AM)handi Wrote: ...you ALWAYS must plan on the layers skewing a bit, which is why you leave things wide and mill down after gluing.
This, for sure. Also, while I'm applying clamps, I hammer down the edges of the laminations using a scrap wood block to get them back into alignment.
Wood is good.
Posts: 402
Threads: 0
Joined: Jun 2010
Try ratcheting truck straps instead of clamps. Pad the straps with a few extra laminations without glue, but wax, on them.