We are looking for a type of clamp that may just be mythical or some figment of my imagination, but I swore I saw these once on an online supplier's site and cannot remember where, or who, or the name of the clamp.
The application is for gluing up a few specific mouldings that we fabricate in-house at our cabinet shop, typically a light rail that is a simple L shape, both piece of wood being roughly 2" long (maple, cherry, oak hardwood). We spline them together with a dado cut so that they always clamp up right.
Anyhow, the clamps (if they even actually exist) were 6 or 8' long, had two faces that your glue-up sat in between, and had locking levers that clamped the two long faces together.
Rather than using hand clamps every foot or so to get a good, airtight glue joint, these were just a half dozen levers to lock down until cured.
If these things even exist, I don't know what they are called, can anyone throw me a bone?
We glue up enough parts like this that the hand clamps are getting annoying....... but we do NOT do enough to justify occupying the whole wall with an 8' long rack of door panel type glueup racks.
Thanks,
Matt