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Harold Burrell
07-30-2014, 9:48 AM
OK...I kind of asked this in another thread...but apparently I didn't make myself clear, because...well...it really didn't answer my question.

Please allow me to restate it simply...

I am building a Roubo. HOPEFULLY (if it ever gets done) it will look sort of like the one below (except mine will be made entirely of pine...and won't have a wood screw vise...nor a cool old end vise...but you get the idea).

The thing has some VERY beefy mortise and tenons. I plan to draw bore them. I also plan to glue it all up. HOWEVER...assembling this thing is time consuming (to say the least). I need something with a very long open time AND something that would be rather flexible once it is dried (Chris Schwartz says he uses "Construction Epoxy", whatever that is.)

So...what I am asking is...what should I use? I need brand names, where-to-buy, etc. (It is always best to keep in mind, when you are answering my inquiries, that I am not very smart.)

And...BTW...I don't have much money.

Prashun Patel
07-30-2014, 9:57 AM
There are two products I've used for extended open time:

Titebond Extend has an opentime of more than 15 minutes.

System 3 T88 Epoxy. This has an open time of about 45 minutes. (the small size ~$20 should be enough for your bench)

You can get both from Woodcraft or Amzn.

Personally, I hate glueups of more than a couple joints at a time. Can you do it in stages just to save yourself the sweat?

Matthew N. Masail
07-30-2014, 10:00 AM
I planing about the same thing as you, all pine, no money, no fancy vises. I will use regular wood glue for the M&T joints, maybe a white PVA if I feel the need for longer open time,
it's plenty strong if you also drawbore it.

Derek Cohen
07-30-2014, 10:11 AM
I pinned rather than drawbored the mortice and tenons for the top. The reason was that I can removed the pins if I need to take off the top, while it will be a tough job with a drawbore. I doubt that you will get extra rigidity with drawboring if your joints are a good fit to start with.

Regards from Perth

Derek

John Walkowiak
07-30-2014, 10:12 AM
Liquid hide glue has the most open time of any glue I know of, but it is not as cheap as the others. Perhaps if you found an online seller that offered it in a gallon size it would be less expensive. You will have to leave the clamps on at least 12 hours, and yes it is as strong as any other glue. As with other glues it does have an outdate, so check the date on the bottle. Good luck with it!

Jim Matthews
07-30-2014, 10:15 AM
Titebond II Extend would be my recommendation.

****

Regarding long open times,
if your concern is in getting things
aligned as you go, cauls are your friend.

They could be made from the leg stock,
to laminate your table top first and
then cut to the proper leg dimensions.

I recommend laminating legs from the same batch of lumber
used to make the top. Leave a "space" where you want the mortises.

Leave the leg stock long, where you want the tenons.

This is accomplished by inserting a "spacer" piece wrapped in wax paper or plastic
where you want the hole during glue up.

Have a browse through this page (http://zachmannfamily.com/workbench.html), to see a practical application.

Christopher Charles
07-30-2014, 11:56 AM
I used titebond ii when I built mine and pinned the top to the base as Derek said. I'd strongly recommend only gluing 2-4 pieces at a time, building the slab up in stages. Way less stressful.

Good luck!

Phil Stone
07-30-2014, 12:04 PM
I used titebond ii when I built mine and pinned the top to the base as Derek said. I'd strongly recommend only gluing 2-4 pieces at a time, building the slab up in stages. Way less stressful.

Good luck!

Pardon my ignorance, but by "pinned" do you just mean staight doweled (as opposed to the offset used for drawboring)?

ken hatch
07-30-2014, 12:15 PM
OK...I kind of asked this in another thread...but apparently I didn't make myself clear, because...well...it really didn't answer my question.

Please allow me to restate it simply...

I am building a Roubo. HOPEFULLY (if it ever gets done) it will look sort of like the one below (except mine will be made entirely of pine...and won't have a wood screw vise...nor a cool old end vise...but you get the idea).

The thing has some VERY beefy mortise and tenons. I plan to draw bore them. I also plan to glue it all up. HOWEVER...assembling this thing is time consuming (to say the least). I need something with a very long open time AND something that would be rather flexible once it is dried (Chris Schwartz says he uses "Construction Epoxy", whatever that is.)

So...what I am asking is...what should I use? I need brand names, where-to-buy, etc. (It is always best to keep in mind, when you are answering my inquiries, that I am not very smart.)

And...BTW...I don't have much money.


Harold,

The bench I built before this last one was a Roubo based bench made of construction grade SYP, most of my work benches have been/are made of SYP. It makes a very good bench. Also the last bench had no glue in the joinery, just draw bored joints. With draw boring there is no need for glue, if it is a simple glue up I will sometimes use liquid hide glue but not often. once the glue up become complex I lose the glue. Then it is a simple no stress putting together a set of tinker toys, draw boring each joint as you go.

I hope this helps,

ken

P.S. another advantage of draw boring is you do not need clamps nor do you need to wait for the glue to set.

Harold Burrell
07-30-2014, 1:57 PM
Thanks guys.

Once again, it appears that I have not been clear...

My bench is, for the most part, built. I have the top and the legs and the stretchers made. I have the mortises and the tenons cut. All I have yet to do is drill the peg holes. Basically, I am ready for assembly.

I would LOVE to assemble it in stages. However (unless I am missing something) I don't see how that would be possible. Not only are there HUGE tenons at the top of the legs that go thru the top, but there are also HUGE mitered tenons on the stretchers going into the legs about 3" from the bottom.

Phil Stone
07-30-2014, 2:03 PM
Thanks guys.

Once again, it appears that I have not been clear...

My bench is, for the most part, built. I have the top and the legs and the stretchers made. I have the mortises and the tenons cut. All I have yet to do is drill the peg holes. Basically, I am ready for assembly.

I would LOVE to assemble it in stages. However (unless I am missing something) I don't see how that would be possible. Not only are there HUGE tenons at the top of the legs that go thru the top, but there are also HUGE mitered tenons on the stretchers going into the legs about 3" from the bottom.

Harold, I don't quite understand. It sounds like you're finished with the laminations (top, legs, stretchers), and now you're putting it all together. If so, you've done the tricky gluing, and can do all the rest with drawboring, no?

EDIT: sorry, rereading your OP, I see that you want to drawbore it AND glue it. I guess it's not helpful to say (I'm building a Roubo-inspired bench as well) I would forget about the glue. Drawboring is plenty strong, and has none of the stress associated with a complex simultaneous glue-up.

Matt Knights
07-30-2014, 3:18 PM
I didn't glue or drawbore mine, the top is mortised and is just sat on the tenons. no racking on my bench. This way if i ever need to move the bench e.g from one house to another I can remove the top to lighten the load a little.

Matt

Phil Stone
07-30-2014, 4:18 PM
I didn't glue or drawbore mine, the top is mortised and is just sat on the tenons. no racking on my bench. This way if i ever need to move the bench e.g from one house to another I can remove the top to lighten the load a little.

Matt

I have the same goal, but don't want the top to lift off accidentally if I try to move the bench a little. I originally planned to use long bolts through the top and the leg tenons, but now I'm thinking of maybe using Miller dowels, two driven in from the outside, and one driven through the middle of the tenon from the inside. I think that will hold pretty well, and still be knockdown-able.

Jessica Pierce-LaRose
07-30-2014, 4:31 PM
Proper sized draw bores should be plenty sturdy without glue, so that doesn't hurt. As far as assembling in stages, why isn't that a possibility? If you're using draw bores everywhere, you simply attach the stretchers to legs, draw bore to secure it. Then attach the two leg assemblies, draw bores to a secure it, and then finish with the top. That's how I did my bench. (Although I didn't draw bore, pin, or even glue the top on mine, but it seems plenty secure at this point. It was going to happen - but, well . . . it hasn't.

Malcolm Schweizer
07-30-2014, 5:21 PM
To further not directly answer your question, I would use PVA glue in a tenon joint because it will swell the joint. Epoxy will not as much swell the joint, although it will make assembly easier (because it is slippery).

Jim Matthews
07-30-2014, 5:43 PM
My bench is, for the most part, built. I have the top and the legs and the stretchers made. I have the mortises and the tenons cut. All I have yet to do is drill the peg holes. Basically, I am ready for assembly.

Gotcha. Missed that part.

Build it upside down.
Put it face down on a stickers, so you can get a grip underneath
once all the glue dries...

First one set of legs, then the other.

That way, you can drive the legs home with a mallet
instead of persuading the top.

Use framing squares to make sure you're properly aligned.

Join the stretchers last.
(There will be some flex in the leg assembly.)

Get some help to roll the beast upright, when you're done.

A couple of milkcrates should get it high enough that you
can rock it upright on one set of legs.

If you've got exposed floor joists in your shop,
you could rig something overhead to move it yourself
(the method I use for heavy things in my shop).

Using two ratcheting straps, you can lift almost anything.
(Tighten one strap, then the other - and so on.)

I've wrestled with a fully assembled top onto an already built leg assembly.
It's more than I can handle, on my own - more than once.

Following this suggested sequence means you've got plenty of time,
and needn't struggle against gravity, until the very end.

Andrae Covington
07-30-2014, 5:45 PM
There are two products I've used for extended open time:

Titebond Extend has an opentime of more than 15 minutes.

System 3 T88 Epoxy. This has an open time of about 45 minutes. (the small size ~$20 should be enough for your bench)

You can get both from Woodcraft or Amzn.

Personally, I hate glueups of more than a couple joints at a time. Can you do it in stages just to save yourself the sweat?

I used both of these on my bench, and the open time worked out fine for me. Unfortunately a check of Harold's location shows the nearest Woodcraft and Rockler stores are roughly two hours away. I don't think Home Depot and Lowes carry the Extend, or the T88 epoxy. They probably have some other brand of epoxy that would work.

I bought a gallon of Titebond Extend to do the entire project, including laminating boards for the top, legs, everything. Way more than I needed; there's still half a gallon sitting on a shelf years beyond the expiration date.

I used the epoxy for the mortise and tenon joints, to fill gaps where I gnawed them out with my teeth.:rolleyes: I bought the small set as Prashun recommends and I still have some left; so it doesn't take very much. I also drawbored them just to make sure.

I started by gluing the short stretchers to the front and back legs and letting that set up before moving on. I think as several people have suggested, you could do the glue-up in stages, even though the joinery is massive. I also agree that you could drawbore the joints without glue, giving you all the time in the world.

Warren Mickley
07-30-2014, 5:58 PM
I think you could easily glue the tenons if you organized everything ahead, but I would not glue the bench. My own bench was draw bored and pinned without glue 35 years ago, and is fairly easy to disassemble. Roubo's design has the stretchers a bit narrower than the legs. Since the pins are close to the shoulder, they can be accessed from the back of the joint for easy removal. This will not work if the stretchers are thick enough to cover up the ends of the pins. Here is Andre Roubo's bench.
293984293985

Phil Stone
07-30-2014, 5:59 PM
I think you could easily glue the tenons if you organized everything ahead, but I would not glue the bench. My own bench was draw bored and pinned without glue 35 years ago, and is fairly easy to disassemble. Roubo's design has the stretchers a bit narrower than the legs. Since the pins are close to the shoulder, they can be accessed from the back of the joint for easy removal. This will not work if the stretchers are thick enough to cover up the ends of the pins. Here is Andre Roubo's bench.
293984293985

Again, could I ask what the difference is between drawboring and pinning? Is pinning just straight doweling, without the offset used for drawboring?

Warren Mickley
07-30-2014, 6:13 PM
I guess I was using drawbore to mean boring offset holes and pinning to mean driving in pins. On some work you could clamp the joint together and bore through cheek and tenon at once, and just pin, but I don't think that is practical here. If you don't clamp you have to drawbore or risk a problem joint.

Phil Stone
07-30-2014, 6:28 PM
I guess I was using drawbore to mean boring offset holes and pinning to mean driving in pins. On some work you could clamp the joint together and bore through cheek and tenon at once, and just pin, but I don't think that is practical here. If you don't clamp you have to drawbore or risk a problem joint.

OK, but earlier in the thread Derek made a distinction between drawboring and pinning:


I pinned rather than drawbored the mortice and tenons for the top. The reason was that I can removed the pins if I need to take off the top, while it will be a tough job with a drawbore. I doubt that you will get extra rigidity with drawboring if your joints are a good fit to start with.

I'm curious if "pinning" in this context just means doweling without an offset. (Sorry if I'm semi-hijacking the OP's thread, but it relates to various methods of securing a Roubo top).

Warren Mickley
07-30-2014, 7:17 PM
Roubo made rather careful drawings and apparently pinned the stretchers but not the top. I would do likewise. Any pin that is placed in such a way as to preclude pushing it back out from behind is going to be trouble to remove.

We generally use tapered pins and not dowels to secure tenons, whether it be a cabinet door or a barn frame. I use the term pinning whether the holes are offset, or the cheeks and tenons are bored together under clamping pressure, or the joint is glued together, then bored and pinned.

Derek Cohen
07-30-2014, 7:41 PM
OK, but earlier in the thread Derek made a distinction between drawboring and pinning:



I'm curious if "pinning" in this context just means doweling without an offset. (Sorry if I'm semi-hijacking the OP's thread, but it relates to various methods of securing a Roubo top).

Just to clarify.

My recommendation follows the example I set for my own bench. The base is Jarrah and all the joints here were drawbored. That is, the pins went through holes that were off set. The joints were not glued. The drawbored mortice-and-tenon joint is very strong and has nil movement.

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/ShopMadeTools/DodgedaBullet_html_m38109e8e.jpg

The top is held to the legs with a blind M&T joint. Frankly, the European Oak top is heavy enough that it would not move if all it did was sit on the tenons. I wanted a joint that could be easily undone should I need to move the bench to a new home. The solution I used was to pin non-offset holes - simply drilled them with the top in place. That would allow for drilling out, if needed, which cannot be done with offset holes.

http://www.inthewoodshop.com/ShopMadeTools/OhSoclose_html_23f42abb.jpg

Regards from Perth

Derek

Pat Barry
07-30-2014, 8:24 PM
My bench is rather small, 5 ft long, 2 ft wide, 2 1/4" thick Ash top on construction lumber leg and stretcher assembly. Tenon on top of each leg that fit into blind mortises in the top that, frankly, are probably a bit sloppy due to my lack of skill chopping mortises and the ash wasn't real cooperative. None the less, the weight of the top is perfectly fine to hold it in place. I have never noticed a problem with it moving at all and I really had to do a lot of planing of the top to planarize it after completing the assembly. My backup plan was to pn it if need be and I'm happy I didn't need to. I do not go around lifting my bench though. I liked the idea of the easy to remove top if I ever needed to move it somewhere.

Joe A Faulkner
07-30-2014, 9:43 PM
I'm with Joshua - you can do it in stages. The only thing I would add to his instructions - first dry fit everything - start with the short stretchers - assemble the pairs of legs; then add the long stretchers to one end, and then the other. I'd probably throw a pipe clamp or two across the long stretchers, and a f-clamp or two across the short stretchers and then make sure you can attach the top and everything is square. Once you are done with the dry fit, pull everything apart and label your mortise and tennons so you reassemble everything in the same orientation/mating as the dry fit. Then proceed as Joshua suggests. Since you are using pine, I would go with Tightbond II - squeeze out matches pine fairly well :). I would not glue the top to the legs.

Matt Knights
07-31-2014, 1:50 AM
I have the same goal, but don't want the top to lift off accidentally if I try to move the bench a little. I originally planned to use long bolts through the top and the leg tenons, but now I'm thinking of maybe using Miller dowels, two driven in from the outside, and one driven through the middle of the tenon from the inside. I think that will hold pretty well, and still be knockdown-able.

I can lift the full weight on one end using the top and it doesn't move at all. I think I would need to beat on it to remove. I will take some pictures at the weekend and post.

Matt

ken hatch
07-31-2014, 7:45 AM
Just to clarify.

My recommendation follows the example I set for my own bench. The base is Jarrah and all the joints here were drawbored. That is, the pins went through holes that were off set. The joints were not glued. The drawbored mortice-and-tenon joint is very strong and has nil movement.



The top is held to the legs with a blind M&T joint. Frankly, the European Oak top is heavy enough that it would not move if all it did was sit on the tenons. I wanted a joint that could be easily undone should I need to move the bench to a new home. The solution I used was to pin non-offset holes - simply drilled them with the top in place. That would allow for drilling out, if needed, which cannot be done with offset holes.



Regards from Perth

Derek

Derek,

Thanks, a good explanation and statement of reasoning.

My last two benches were done the same way, draw bore the base with out glue and pin the slab. Both are solid and will remain that way. Most of my furniture is built the same except for top attachment. A bench build with the size, weight, and cost of materials, to glue the joints would take my stress level to DefCon 10. With good shoulders and well marked and drilled tenon bores, assembly is a leisurely process of putting together tinker toys and it is as strong or stronger than any glue joint.

ken

Brian Holcombe
07-31-2014, 8:06 AM
Harold,

Is the bench you are building is exactly that in your first photo?

Draw-bored is offset then worked together with a dowel that has a tapered start. 'Pinned' generally means that the piece was clamped tight, glued up, then dowelled.

Draw-Boring relies on the dowels, specifically, to hold the joint together.

Generally speaking, When something is 'pinned' the pins are usually the back-up plan, meaning they are there incase the glue fails. Though, as some have mentioned, they use pinned joints in situations where they want to be able to take apart the joint with ease.

Phil Stone
07-31-2014, 11:23 AM
I appreciate the clarification re: drawboring vs. pinning. It is what I thought, and I will be doing the same with my bench, i.e. drawboring the stretchers to the legs and then pinning the blind M&T joint between the legs and the top. Actually, I'll be using Benchcrafted barrel nuts and bolts for the long stretchers, for an easier knock-down. I figure I can leave the legs and end stretcher assemblies intact and still move them easily if I have to, so I'll drawbore those joints.

OP, it must be maddening that nobody has an answer for you about the "construction epoxy", but perhaps we've all talked you out of gluing the top on in the first place?

Tom Vanzant
07-31-2014, 11:45 AM
Harold, it sounds like you just have to decide: draw-bore vs pinned. Draw-boring eliminates the need for clamps, but once glued, they're the same. Either way, assemble inverted with the legs partially inserted into the top. This will assure alignment when you seat the top. If you EVER want to remove the top, dry-pin the M/T joints as Derek suggested.
I am designing a new base for an existing top. It will be "Roubo lite" with stretchers and rails pinned & glued (M/T joints) to the legs and the top attached with bolts thru the upper end rails into existing threaded inserts in the top.
Good luck on your glue-up.