It’s crazy rare to see people really making real 1000 year products. You guys are doing it. Top quality modern process, but incredible attention to detail as well. Great work guys 🔥
Wow man. I had no idea you could fix a table top like that! Touche!! going to keep that on in my back pocket to pull out at a later time.. Incidentally, Im finally getting that new shop space I have always wanted. Will be great when I can finally move out of the garage which we use as the main entrance way into our house and move into a new 30x30 shop!
It pulled flat from the c channel alone. If you notice I added a small one where the peak of the cup was. It was due to a piece that cracked during the milling. So it didn’t glue flat
Hey guys. I have a live edge slab table 40 inches wide and 9 1/2 feet long that has cupped. Not horrible but enough to notice. Can it be fixed with C Channel. It’s cypress.
Nope never. Dominos or biscuits is all we have tired. Though I have been eyeing a dowel joiner machine. You just gotta be wicked accurate to make it work right
I had this idea come to me recently. My, thoughts were to mortise the holes with some play in them for easy alignment then fill with epoxy and use rebar vs dowels for rigidity clamp ,and use cauls to keep flat until everything cures
I'm curious though if it will still have enough movement for expansion or contraction or if it would split when it moves. Obviously dominos are made of wood so they naturally allow for some movement. I'm going to try this out for experimentation and mere curiosity purposes. C channel is obviously the way to go but I enjoy testing and exploring different ideas and philosophies and occasionally they improve on something I've dome or so methodology I've use previously .
The c channel we use is slotted so as long as you don’t over tighten the screws, your foot to go. Either way let us know! If you send us some video of your experiment we will include it in a future video in the topic:)
@@celticRemodelingCoach Imagine years down the line someone wants to repurpose it.. Or maybe a elephant fell outa sky landed on it and it needs to be fixed. Fire up the old track saw and make a cut through a piece of rebar that would b sick.
It’s crazy rare to see people really making real 1000 year products. You guys are doing it. Top quality modern process, but incredible attention to detail as well. Great work guys 🔥
🔥🪵 we want people in the future to be like “oh that’s a TNT table, it’ll last forever”
Wow man. I had no idea you could fix a table top like that! Touche!! going to keep that on in my back pocket to pull out at a later time.. Incidentally, Im finally getting that new shop space I have always wanted. Will be great when I can finally move out of the garage which we use as the main entrance way into our house and move into a new 30x30 shop!
Hell yeah!!!
Great job guys, missed yall at the meeting Tuesday night...
I know! I looked up after I was done working and it was too late. We have been slammed lately
Nice save!
Did you clamp the table top flat and then install the C-channel or pull out the cup during the C-channel install? Thanks for sharing
It pulled flat from the c channel alone. If you notice I added a small one where the peak of the cup was. It was due to a piece that cracked during the milling. So it didn’t glue flat
@@TNTINDUSTRIESLLC Thank you
@@TNTINDUSTRIESLLCdoes that work because the router is following the surface as it cuts? I guess it is referencing the local surface.
Hey guys. I have a live edge slab table 40 inches wide and 9 1/2 feet long that has cupped. Not horrible but enough to notice. Can it be fixed with C Channel. It’s cypress.
3 pieces of 3/4 c channel should do it. One at each end and one in the middle
Can you heat it up and let it settle back ? And apply more finee? Or does that only work on UA-cam ?
Digging your channel . ever tried using a dowel jig and rebar with epoxy while joining your glue ups?
Nope never. Dominos or biscuits is all we have tired. Though I have been eyeing a dowel joiner machine. You just gotta be wicked accurate to make it work right
I had this idea come to me recently. My, thoughts were to mortise the holes with some play in them for easy alignment then fill with epoxy and use rebar vs dowels for rigidity clamp ,and use cauls to keep flat until everything cures
I'm curious though if it will still have enough movement for expansion or contraction or if it would split when it moves. Obviously dominos are made of wood so they naturally allow for some movement. I'm going to try this out for experimentation and mere curiosity purposes. C channel is obviously the way to go but I enjoy testing and exploring different ideas and philosophies and occasionally they improve on something I've dome or so methodology I've use previously .
The c channel we use is slotted so as long as you don’t over tighten the screws, your foot to go. Either way let us know! If you send us some video of your experiment we will include it in a future video in the topic:)
@@celticRemodelingCoach Imagine years down the line someone wants to repurpose it.. Or maybe a elephant fell outa sky landed on it and it needs to be fixed. Fire up the old track saw and make a cut through a piece of rebar that would b sick.