GaryLaroff
Member
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2008
- Messages
- 179
I put essentially this same request into another topic this morning and think it got lost, so here it is as a fresh request. I have read the full topic on adding banding to MDF, so it isn't necessary to aim me there unless you feel it necessary.
I am working on a project for myself, am aiming for quality, not speed of completion and would like to have it become one of my best and most beautiful pieces. It is a large tool cabinet for my shop made from solid mahogany with a lot of hand work. There are no metal fasteners and all parts of all the drawers are being made with hand tools with the exception of initial parts cutting on the table saw. All dovetails in the cabinet are hand cut but the heavy-duty mortise and tenon joints holding the cabinet together are all dominos.
There will be some non-movable shelves made of high-quality mahogany veneer plywood that is a full 3/4 thick. On the front of the shelves will be fairly thick banding of at least two inches of re-purposed fairly dense old mahogany salvaged from beams somewhere.
What is the best approach to attaching the banding? Although I have a plate joiner in a box gathering dust somewhere, one preference is to use the Domino with 4mm or 5mm domino tenons.
The other choice fits with the suggestions of ccarrolladams and Dovetail65 and would be the use of a "tongue and groove 60 degree" edge banding router bit set as in:
http://cdn.eagleamerica.com/images/popup/vp16-4041_p.jpg
and
http://www.mlcswoodworking.com/orderstatus/html/smarthtml/pages/bit_edgeband_ogee.html
Do you have a suggestion as to which approach would be better? In your view, is the full tongue and groove solution substantially better than using dominos?
Thanks in advance,
Gary
I am working on a project for myself, am aiming for quality, not speed of completion and would like to have it become one of my best and most beautiful pieces. It is a large tool cabinet for my shop made from solid mahogany with a lot of hand work. There are no metal fasteners and all parts of all the drawers are being made with hand tools with the exception of initial parts cutting on the table saw. All dovetails in the cabinet are hand cut but the heavy-duty mortise and tenon joints holding the cabinet together are all dominos.
There will be some non-movable shelves made of high-quality mahogany veneer plywood that is a full 3/4 thick. On the front of the shelves will be fairly thick banding of at least two inches of re-purposed fairly dense old mahogany salvaged from beams somewhere.
What is the best approach to attaching the banding? Although I have a plate joiner in a box gathering dust somewhere, one preference is to use the Domino with 4mm or 5mm domino tenons.
The other choice fits with the suggestions of ccarrolladams and Dovetail65 and would be the use of a "tongue and groove 60 degree" edge banding router bit set as in:
http://cdn.eagleamerica.com/images/popup/vp16-4041_p.jpg
and
http://www.mlcswoodworking.com/orderstatus/html/smarthtml/pages/bit_edgeband_ogee.html
Do you have a suggestion as to which approach would be better? In your view, is the full tongue and groove solution substantially better than using dominos?
Thanks in advance,
Gary