Going to Try veneering. Looking for a good source of veneer. Also a couple of questions.
- Unbacked veneer - how to use? Use Heat Lock Glue? Most of the interesting veneers are raw veneers, though I am hesitant to use raw unbacked veneer as the first attempt
- PSA veneer - seems to be the easiest - On MDF, other than sanding (to 220 or 320?), any other prep needs to be done since it is a porous material? Does the MDF needs to be sealed - if so how?
I am about to order a bunch of items from veneer supply. Currently, I am just looking to doing a straight forward box with butt joints, no bending, etc. Would a double layer of veneer over the butt joint be effective, or is there any other suggested method?
Thanks
Ani
Comments
I think tom does mostly paperbacked veneers if im not mistaken. . I have some of this glue and alot of raw veneer but ive never done anything with it. I tried raw veneer with contact cement and the contact cement bleeds though and when your sanding / finishing i had like little gummy glue pieces getting stuck to my applicator (through the veneer). They just kept pulling up it was strange.
Also, I posted this a while ago
http://diy.midwestaudio.club/discussion/226/cold-press-veneer-glue-unibond-one#latest
It's not good for iron-on veneering but perfect for cold pressing.
This is hot press
Ron
Ani, Cold pressing is simply pressing or clamping the veneer to the substrate until the glue dries. It requires an additional panel the size of or a little larger then the veneer you are applying. 3/4" thick or thicker depending on how big the panels are. You would roll the glue onto your substrate panel (speaker box), place the piece of veneer down over that, cover it with a sheet of wax paper and then place the clamping panel over the wax paper. Use as many clamps as you can attach. In most cases, you could do two sides at once, the opposite sides so they are both being clamped by the same clamps. Also, when cold pressing, it's really important to be working with very flat veneer. Sometimes this means you have to flatten the veneer by applying a softener and clamp it between two flat boards. Usually overnight is long enough to get it flat.
Cold pressing does take longer than the Iron on method but it's safer on raw veneer, it's really easy to split raw veneer with the heat from the iron since the veneer doesn't have a backer. I like the ability to actually see the real veneer I will be purchasing and like you said, most of that on Veneer Supplies website is unbacked. If you don't mind the extra time involved, it's not difficult.
Contact cement with the same maple developed small cracks in the curse of 2 years and 1 move.
Then cold pressed the same maple and as far as I know (I made those for a coworker) they are ok.
My HT mains have paper backed mahogany and are still looking good after about 3 years.
My bedroom speakers and amp are cold pressed raw walnut and still look good after about 2 years.
So in my experience and small research iron on raw veneer can cause cracks (actually splits), so if you want to use this method test it in a scrap before.
Contact cement is very popular but the one I have tested gets lumpy when applying it and I hate the fumes.
Cold pressing with cauls and clamps works great and is easy with smallish pieces, if your substrate or pressing "plate" is less than perfectly straight you can add a "pressing aid". I used 3mm craft foam for a pair of speakers where the plywood had some high spots that I did not want to plane.
1. What is the best method to cut veneer? I used kitchen sicssors and a box knife, wasn't the smoothest.
2. After routing, my trim bit is full of stuck gunk. I scraped off s much as I could, what's the best way to clean it?
I use an X-acto knife with a fresh blade and a sacrificial sheet of cardboard behind the veneer to rough cut it. Works well with paper backed veneer (the only kind I've used thus far).
Thanks Brian and Ron for the help and veneer sample. Now I have another thing to work with.