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Thread: Glueing Silky Oak
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13th October 2005, 06:35 PM #1New Member
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Glueing Silky Oak
I am about to glue up a Silky oak blanket box top; can anyone help me with which specific glue to use; I also need to know if Silky oak will take a standard Mirotone lacquer ??
retep52
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13th October 2005, 08:20 PM #2
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14th October 2005, 08:06 AM #3New Member
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Thanks for the advice MP but I have made several trial joints with PVA (12 hour press time) and all failed on the glue line. However, I also made one with epoxy which I tested this morning and the timber broke away from the glue line, so I may go with the epoxy.
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14th October 2005, 01:09 PM #4
retep
have you checked the state of your glue- it does go off with time and it may be that rather than the timber. I have glued both Cardwellia and Grevillea silky with PVA and cross linking PVA without issue.
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14th October 2005, 01:29 PM #5Senior Member
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PVA Glue
Don't use your standard PVA glues. You need the waterproof PVA's such as the Triton or Selley's Tradesmans Choice.
Haven't heard of the lacquer you are using, but does it contain Tung Oil. Definately the best ingredient to have in any finish.
Don
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14th October 2005, 01:51 PM #6
The Silky oak rocking dragon I just made was glued together with Araldite (epoxy) and no problems, but I've also used cross linking PVA which works fine. As PAH says, check the use-by date. This stuff doesn't last longer than a year esp. in a shed with temperature extremes...like mine !
Watch out for excess glue, as it is hard to remove from open grained timber such as Silky. Wipe up with a damp rag when uncured.
Cheers,Andy Mac
Change is inevitable, growth is optional.
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14th October 2005, 06:07 PM #7New Member
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Thanks Pah, but the glue is fine; I think I may stick with the epoxy
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14th October 2005, 06:08 PM #8New Member
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Thanks for your input Don
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14th October 2005, 06:11 PM #9New Member
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Thanks Andy, I have been making solid timber furnature professionally since 1971, but this is the first time I have ever used Silky Oak; I will post a pic when "she" is finished.
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14th October 2005, 10:54 PM #10
Retep,
I've glued together quite a lot of silky oak, both Cardwellia Sublimis and Grevillea Robusta and have never had any problems using PVA, X linking PVA, Polyurethane or Epoxy. Use the epoxy by all means, but you may want to test your batch of PVA on some scrap timber of varoius species as it may be off.
Mick"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
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14th October 2005, 11:17 PM #11
I agree with Mick. Polishing with lacquer is also no problem, however silky oak (both species) is a very open grain timber and does need quite a bit of grain filler.
JimSometimes in the daily challenges that life gives us, we miss what is really important...
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15th October 2005, 05:59 AM #12New Member
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Thanks Mick, I will buy new glue today and test both old and new; hopefully it is the glue batch that is the problem and not the timber.
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16th October 2005, 08:49 AM #13New Member
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I have been trying to download pictures of my tests for glueing Silky Oak but so far it seems I do not have permission to do so. What must I do to allow this to happen? The pictures show in great detail the problem I am having with adhesion and I thought perhaps there may be one or 2 out there who would be interested.
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22nd October 2005, 07:33 PM #14Awaiting Email Confirmation
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Depending on the type of PVA over time they age and the molecules increase in size. the key to PVA forming agood bond is having enough small molecules that can penetrate into a wood. An old glue, especially if been left at high temperatures will have a far larger molecular size, hence the chance of getting a good bond drops. this is also seen by a viscosity rise, an old PVA will be thicker than a new PVA.
the other thing is that the thickening additive in them is very susectible to fungal / microbe attack, and they can feed on the product which doesnt do the chance of glueing any good.
PVA also has a 'chalk point', this is a temperature under which the PVA willnot form a continous film, andtherefore will not bond. Usually this is between zero and 10 degrees' but if it was warmer than this it should not be a problem.
The only other thing coud be if you have used a stain or oil that is interfering with theglue ine.
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27th October 2005, 09:41 AM #15Intermediate Member
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Not all PVA's, even if apparently the same generically, are the same. Like so much else in recent times common or garden white PVA's are often re-packs from imported sources where quality maybe suspect and where quality control is also an issue. There are now a range of PVA's from single pack white right through to two pack cross-linking. In the middle are so called yellow glues which have a harder cure, lower creep, machine better and which offer a much stronger glue up. It also glues slightly greasy timbers like silky especially well (it was actually formulated in part to glue MDF which has a waxy feel). We market AV180 as our House brand. It's made by AV Syntec in QLD. We date every bottle with a use by (which BTW is a very conservative time) and a batch code. It can be mailed in the regular post. Final points. You usually get what you pay for. Expect to pay high teens to low twenties for a 1/2 litre.
Apologies if the ad offends
Mike Jefferys
http://www.thewoodworks.com.au/detai...qskudata=C0003
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