Hi all, I'm making my daughter a Jewlery Box and one of the things the plans call for is a piece of Hard Board. It calls for a piece 1/8" x 24 x24. Are they talking about MDF or what? thanks, Sean
Hi all, I'm making my daughter a Jewlery Box and one of the things the plans call for is a piece of Hard Board. It calls for a piece 1/8" x 24 x24. Are they talking about MDF or what? thanks, Sean
A.K.A. "HDF":
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-density_fiberboard
Also known as Masonite.
why don't the companies product a hardboard that are 1/2 or 3/4 inch thick
Sounds like a piece for the bottom. I would go to a hobby store and buy a piece of 5 ply birch plywood. It is used for model aircraft construction.
Hardboard is usually smoother than plywood, which might be why it is called for in this project.
I would look for tempered hardboard, which will resist water damage much better than the untempered hardboard.
big box store have it as well.
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Where can I purchase 1/4 inch hard board for making templates and jigs?
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Two different products here with overlapping names. Hardboard is typically up to 6mm thick, glossy one one side and textured on the other, extremely dense and can be dark coloured. Hardboard can be tempered as already mentioned and also in non-conducting grades for switch panels etc.
HDF is a high density version of MDF that is more commonly 16-20mm thick and is as heavy as compressed cement sheet and can be used similarly. It is smooth both sides and can be worked with TCT tools with considerable effort. As I said, the names overlap in practice so one has to speak to suppliers carefully to get the one you want.
In your case Sean, ply would do the same job. MDF could be a bit flimsy. Cheers
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As long as we are on the subject...
I bought a sheet of High Density Overlay (HDO) recently - and used if for a work table. Very interesting stuff. My 4'x8'x3/4" sheet is a plywood core with a thin 1/16" HDF ply on each side. Each sheet is very heavy and very smooth on the surface. They use similar sheet goods for highway signs and concrete forms. Works great for table tops where I want the surface to be smooth and durable.
Anyone else have any experience with HDO?