Laminating and Solid Surfacing

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A first for me, solid edge banding?

7/8/19       
Mark B Member

A designer is asking a two pronged question, applying solid wood edge treatment to solid surface? And then inlaying a solid wood inlay into a solid surface field? Fouled with the finishing but can think of a few options. Anyone ever heard of such a thing?

7/9/19       #2: A first for me, solid edge banding? ...
Paul Miller

Website: http://MCCWOODWORKING.COM

DuPont used to have a Certification program for fabricators. I went to their certification class in 1991. Gluing solid wood onto or sandwiching wood between Corian, like a decorative edge was a no no. No warrant, the corian and the wood expand differently.

7/9/19       #3: A first for me, solid edge banding? ...
Mark B Member

Thanks Paul. That was my comment to her. I cant see how an inlay or any adhered application would work over the long haul. That said, I havent been able to make sense of all this epoxy craze and the same issues with wood movement and thick resin (we have never done any).

She wasnt phased by the lack of a warranty from the SS manufacturer.

I have a publication saved from Dupont that speaks to adhering it to a lot of things other than wood. Glass, Steel, Acrylic, etc. Also speaks to thread-serts and so on for mechanical fastening but nothing with regards to wood.

I might toss a drop on the CNC and blow a solid wood inlay and bed it in with epoxy and throw it outside for a while and see what happens.

7/9/19       #4: A first for me, solid edge banding? ...
Alan F. Member

We did about a thousand table tops for a restaurant chain in the 90's. We did 1/4" Corian contacted to PB core, 1/4" brass inlay and solid oak edge.

We were lucky mostly because they were in an area where the climate and humidity was stable.

We have done conference tables with solid wood edges and other brands inlay tops.
You need to attach the edge to a substrate.
The top in our conference room is a 3" wide wood edge with an Avonite inlay. The shape is an ellipse.

Temperature varies by 25 degrees in the office, humidity by 30%.
Its 16 years old and the deck is about 1/3 the thickness of paper above the Avonite, barely catch it with a fingernail.

It depends on where it goes, I wouldn't warranty it but it can work. I wouldn't do it on the east coast with wide humidity changes.


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