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Location: Wisconsin
10-03-2018, 11:09 AM
(This post was last modified: 10-03-2018, 11:11 AM by Alan S.)
Wood tends to expand and contract crosswise to the grain, but not lengthwise. You can constrain this expansion and contraction by glueing layers perpendicular to one another, as in plywood, within limits. As each layer of solid wood gets thicker, the force of the expansion and contraction increases, as does the stress on the glue. If the force is more than the glue can hold, it will tear apart: to be safe people generally stay at or below 1/8" thick, but much thicker layers can be constrained under some circumstances, as in solid core plywood.
If the solid wood is only on one face of the plywood, it will tend to bend one way in humid weather, and the other way when dry. Putting the same thickness of solid wood on each face, running the grain the same direction, balances these stresses so it should not warp. But the thinner the layer of solid wood on each face, the lower the stress on the glue bond.
But why not just use the 4/4 stock for the tabletop, and make the edge thicker for looks? You may not need the plywood.