I cut them square, butt them up and make sure the joits are staggered and
make sure that the outside pieces are continuous (not pieced). I have done
this for drawers side. The structural compromise is inconsequential and a
drawer side has minimal visual impact. I would not do it on an heirloom
piece but I did this on a few kitchen drawers to use up scrap maple.
-Steve
"HerHusband" wrote in message
...
I want to glue up some scrap boards into panels, but the boards I have are
shorter than the panels I need. So, I'm curious if there is an easy, and
Inexpensive method of gluing boards end to end?
I'd like to glue up a couple of boards end to end. Then cut those to
width,
and glue them side-to-side into panels (staggering end joints, of course).
Then I'll run the panel through my planer and cut to size. That's the
theory anyway....
I thought about getting a finger jointing router bit, but Rockler wants
$75
for one of those ($137 for the adjustable kind)! Ouch... The wood isn't
worth that much. I'm just trying to use up my scraps, and then I won't
need
to do this anymore. So I don't want to make a huge investment.
I thought about a tongue and groove, but that's a fair amount of labor,
and
I'm not sure how it would look when I plane the panels to thickness.
Also thought about cutting the two boards on a bevel, but wasn't sure if
that would really be any stronger than a simple end-to-end butt joint. It
would also be difficult to clamp up?
Any tips?