09-08-2020, 08:00 AM
a friend of mine has a bunch of 10/4 walnut he cut up and has been drying for a few years, and he wants to make a kitchen counter top out of it. (pretty basic, L shaped counter about 7' on the long side and 4' on the short side)... He plans to re-saw it (hoping to yield roughly 3/4" stock) and glue up 4" wide flatsawn boards to get the final ~24" depth.
Normally I'd tell him to glue up two panels over-length and then put a miter on each to make the corner of the "L", but he wants to do a herringbone pattern.
He plans to glue-up and assemble the entire "L" in the shop and carry it into the kitchen for install.
What's the glue-up process then? Seems on first thought that the 24" wide panels need to be glued up/assembled into the herringbone pattern all at once? Or would you cut that staircase pattern into each panel after glueup? Just trying to think through the logistics....
Normally I'd tell him to glue up two panels over-length and then put a miter on each to make the corner of the "L", but he wants to do a herringbone pattern.
He plans to glue-up and assemble the entire "L" in the shop and carry it into the kitchen for install.
What's the glue-up process then? Seems on first thought that the 24" wide panels need to be glued up/assembled into the herringbone pattern all at once? Or would you cut that staircase pattern into each panel after glueup? Just trying to think through the logistics....