Fixing Warped Hardwood Tables EASY
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- Опубліковано 14 лис 2024
- This video by @TNTINDUSTRIESLLC features our made in-house C Channel! Learn how to protect the money and time you invest into your table top with this simple solution!
"In this video we show you how to fix warped or cupped tables, even when you don’t have extra material to cut off.
I can’t believe what I saw in that restaurant… I should of taken close ups but I didn’t want to make the customer feel bad 🤷"
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BIDWELL WOOD AND IRON COMPANY
ONLINE SHOP: bidwellwoodand...
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So, I think I must've missed something. You cut some grooves in the wood and then it flattened out the edges? Nicely shot video, but I have no idea why you got your result. Did you leave the slots on the bottom exposed or seal them? Missing info.
Exactly!! Have a cupped bar top and came here for advice. This is the second video, so far, that doesn't explain what was done. Was the table forced and held flat while the bars were installed? Or did the bars flatten the table out as you screwed them down?
@@lexdiamond20I guess we'll never know since this guy never responded
You insert the bars into the slots and screw them into the wood. This pulls the wood to the shape of the steel bar - which is hopefully straight.
You have oval cuts on the bar in the event the wood wants to move/expand/contract
Very useful. Thanks
Nice
good job man
Is it worth it for $200 profit, after spending on the metalwork?
It's not worth it for the $400 profit
Helpful missing installing the bars ????
Not charging enough money.
$500 for ash?? I got 8-10ft boards for $100
$500 seems like a rip off!
not sure this is intended to be a " how to install channel" video, more of a "channel can solve your cupping problem using channel" video, as a comment for those that seem to be looking for detailed channel instructions. that said, there isn't consensus that channelling glue-ups is required to prevent the problem from occurring, however there seems to be evidence that many use channel for large slab tables as a standard preventative practice. this video presents something different, this is promoting the idea that rather than using channel prevent a problem from occurring, it can be used as fix a problem after it has occurred.
I have used channel on glue-ups as a preventative measure before and chose not to on a recent effort to make 7 restaurant tables. The 2 larger ones have cupped (maybe me, maybe the universe, doesn't matter now) the one being visually apparent. So now I have to deal with it.
I would ask the creators what they thought of the application of moisture to reduce the amount of cupping back to near flat. If this does work as it seems to with breadboards as a test, then will it stay that way? I am thinking if I can get it to come back with moisture and then do the channel to prevent it from going back, that might be a 1-2 approach. one to address the current issue and two to prevent future. I am concerned, the amount of leverage and force required to pull that table top flat using threaded inserts and bolts (an install discussion) and channel on an already cupped surface that is dry wouldn't open up the very real possibility of cracking it and breaking it., especially the now shallower depth of those routed out grooves for channel wall.