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(03-09-2020, 04:04 PM)CEPenworks Wrote: I am building a hall bench 5' wide and 8' tall. I am backing it with 1/2" plywood. Since the plywood is only 4' wide I need to splice in another piece. I can hide the seam behind some dividers that are 3/4" thick. I was thinking to make 3/4" wide 1/4" deep dados on both pieces so I could overlap them at the joint. Am I over thinking this and would it be fine to just butt them together behind the 3/4" dividers?
I'm not following your design idea completely I think. I would consider a frame and panel arrangement with a center stile. Something like this:
https://flic.kr/p/2iCCPhJ
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Just butting them together would give more meat in the dividers for screws to grip into.
John
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How utilitarian is this piece? Or, is it more furniture?
If the latter, Frame and Panel with evenly sized sections.
Gary
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So this is for the back panel. It is open on the front. A picture is below but mine is another cabbie wide and two more high. The open center will have a separate veneered piece. So I can hide the seam of the centered veneer piece and the extra cubbies along one edge behind the dividers. I can either have each board be 3/8" in each direction larger than the opening she the two pieces that meet will butt each other behind a 3/4" board. Or I can cut each back panel 3/4" in all directions larger than the opening and half lap the joints. The half laps would give me 3/4" of glue and nail room vs 3/8" for each panel as the joints.
[attachment=24742]
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If it is for the back why not just get 2 pieces of 4x8 ply and cut both at the 5' mark and stack one on top of another.
You can just bevel the seam at a shallow 45* and then fill it with bondo to hid the seam. Then paint it and no one will be wiser.
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You're overthinking it, just butt them together.
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Thanks for the replies. I will just butt the joints. There are no other verticals other than the one with the door. The panel behind the coat hangers is going to be a separate veneered panel with a book and butt design.
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Butt them together, but make the seam where the door side divides the seat side. That way, you don't see the seam from the front. Don't try to veneer over a joint or seam.
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