smorgasbord
Member
Black Forest has yet another video, but this section surprised me, although maybe it shouldn't have:
(Cued to start at 8:44)
The narrator talks about how they used to use solid wood cabinet backs and drawer bottoms, and had swelling of those bottom wreck the joinery. On the drawer bottoms, they show encapsulating the bottom in grooves on all 4 sides of the drawer. Duh, especially on large cabinet backs with the same entrapped construction. They've now switched to plywood.
Old Timers used solid wood drawer bottoms, with the backs ripped to width just above where the groove would be. This way they could even insert the drawer bottom from the back into an assembled drawer. And then attach the drawer bottom with some thin nails or screws with elongated holes to accommodate the movement.
I know we all have to learn, but I'm surprised that a high-priced cabinet shop like Black Forest would not have had a single woodworker there who could have pointed out the bad construction technique, and that they had to learn it the hard way.
(Cued to start at 8:44)
The narrator talks about how they used to use solid wood cabinet backs and drawer bottoms, and had swelling of those bottom wreck the joinery. On the drawer bottoms, they show encapsulating the bottom in grooves on all 4 sides of the drawer. Duh, especially on large cabinet backs with the same entrapped construction. They've now switched to plywood.
Old Timers used solid wood drawer bottoms, with the backs ripped to width just above where the groove would be. This way they could even insert the drawer bottom from the back into an assembled drawer. And then attach the drawer bottom with some thin nails or screws with elongated holes to accommodate the movement.
I know we all have to learn, but I'm surprised that a high-priced cabinet shop like Black Forest would not have had a single woodworker there who could have pointed out the bad construction technique, and that they had to learn it the hard way.