Scaffold boards for a table top - joining?
Discussion
Got a few spare scaffold boards which once sanded up a little and stained will make a nice desk top.
Bought a couple of box steel frames for legs at either end.
Obviously I can screw the boards onto the frames at either end but is it necessary to bond the individual boards together maybe some dowels and wood glue or screw them into each other or should attaching to the elgs be enough to hold it all together?
Bought a couple of box steel frames for legs at either end.
Obviously I can screw the boards onto the frames at either end but is it necessary to bond the individual boards together maybe some dowels and wood glue or screw them into each other or should attaching to the elgs be enough to hold it all together?
Use PU 5 min or 30 min or 45 minute glue for best results, as long as you have some sash clamps.
It's the best glue ever.
PU glue comes in a pourable tub (like pva) or in a cartridge sleeve for a silicon gun application
Alternative to dowels or biscuits or dogs is using kitchen worktop bolts.
Need a router tho and some sort of jig.

It's the best glue ever.
PU glue comes in a pourable tub (like pva) or in a cartridge sleeve for a silicon gun application
Alternative to dowels or biscuits or dogs is using kitchen worktop bolts.
Need a router tho and some sort of jig.

Edited by Chrisbis on Saturday 16th February 14:02
If you don’t have a router etc then drill and peg is going to be pretty much good enough. I would hazard that the most important step is to keep the wood for some time in the room where the table is to be. Unsightly but it lets the wood aclimatise and should stop any big movements once you’ve pegged and glued it all together.
Chrisbis said:
Use PU 5 min or 30 min or 45 minute glue for best results, as long as you have some sash clamps.
It's the best glue ever.
PU glue comes in a pourable tub (like pva) or in a cartridge sleeve for a silicon gun application
Interesting. I've never ever got on with PU glue and hate the stuff. Why do you rate it so highly? It's the best glue ever.
PU glue comes in a pourable tub (like pva) or in a cartridge sleeve for a silicon gun application
2Btoo said:
Chrisbis said:
Use PU 5 min or 30 min or 45 minute glue for best results, as long as you have some sash clamps.
It's the best glue ever.
PU glue comes in a pourable tub (like pva) or in a cartridge sleeve for a silicon gun application
Interesting. I've never ever got on with PU glue and hate the stuff. Why do you rate it so highly? It's the best glue ever.
PU glue comes in a pourable tub (like pva) or in a cartridge sleeve for a silicon gun application
Dan_1981 said:
Thanks all. The boards are used but only need a bit of a tidy up.
Don't have access to a biscuit so will opt for copious amounts of glue and a couple of dowels per length.
If it were me, I’d be considering half inch dowels at pretty regular intervals, even with good bracing underneath. My general school of thought is that it is better to be thinking ‘ I don’t really need this’ while applying the glue over ‘I hope I’m using enough’. Don't have access to a biscuit so will opt for copious amounts of glue and a couple of dowels per length.
Both PU and PVA form a good bond but PU will expand and create a better joint if the edges aren’t perfectly planed and flush.
Dowels or biscuits or better still a domino joint will help but as scoffold boards have a higher moisture content than a kiln dried softwood intended for furniture if it wants to move as it dries out it will, irrespective of what method has been used.
If it’s a rustic table top finish the OP is after then this all adds to the effect. It can always be sanded flat and filled after the worst of the movement has happened. If a slightly higher end finish is desired it may be worth getting a local joiner to plane up some kiln dried softwood boards, it won’t cost much and they will have more knots and features than scoffold board which tend to have few/no knots.
Dowels or biscuits or better still a domino joint will help but as scoffold boards have a higher moisture content than a kiln dried softwood intended for furniture if it wants to move as it dries out it will, irrespective of what method has been used.
If it’s a rustic table top finish the OP is after then this all adds to the effect. It can always be sanded flat and filled after the worst of the movement has happened. If a slightly higher end finish is desired it may be worth getting a local joiner to plane up some kiln dried softwood boards, it won’t cost much and they will have more knots and features than scoffold board which tend to have few/no knots.
RSVR101 said:
Both PU and PVA form a good bond but PU will expand and create a better joint if the edges aren’t perfectly planed and flush.
Better get the edges perfectly planed and flush then 
If it's a more rustic look with uneven joints/gaps expected, I'd use epoxy, which leaves the finished joint looking tidier than PU.
Another thing to bear in mind with edge joining is that it's a good idea to plane the edges so they are very slightly concave along the length of the boards. They'll come together in the middle under clamping and glueing, but it means the ends of the joints are under compression and less likely to open up as the wood expands and contracts.
Some dude did a lot of glue testing for wood joints:
https://woodgears.ca/joint_strength/glue.html
PVA comes out ahead of PU, the main determinant of strength is surface area, so the expanding PU glues are worse because the foam reduces effective surface area.
https://woodgears.ca/joint_strength/glue.html
PVA comes out ahead of PU, the main determinant of strength is surface area, so the expanding PU glues are worse because the foam reduces effective surface area.
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