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Construction Phase 4 - Panel and Door Assembly
Construction Phase 4 - Panel and Door Assembly
Welcome back...
The next step was to assemble the side panels and the doors.
I ended up bringing all the parts back to my place, so I could be at home yet I was able to keep working.
Each panel/door was made up of seven pieces of solid wood.
There are two stiles, two rails, a mid-stile and the two painted panels.
Here's just a quick look at the parts for the two doors.
Side panels are visible in the background.
To assemble the side panels, I glued the tenons and added some glue in the groove where the tenons will fit.
I used an all-weather wood glue that is made for outdoor applications.
You do not want the glue to be where the painted panels go. You will want them to be "floating" so when the wood expands and contracts during the year, your panels/doors will not crack.
You can see in the photo below, how the pieces are being put together.
Along with a side panel clamped while the glue dries.
I let the panels sit over overnight before I went back into the shop the next day.
The next step was to run the panels/doors through the wide-belt sander to make all of the joints nice and flush.
Starting with 80grit and working my way to the 150 grit sandpaper.
I then hand sanded them with the random orbit hand sander with 120grit sandpaper to remove the cross-grain scratches left by the wide-belt sander.
And finished the sanding with 180grit.
The panels are now ready to be assembled into the stand. And the doors are ready to be stained.
-JASON
Construction Phase 4 - Panel and Door Assembly
Welcome back...
The next step was to assemble the side panels and the doors.
I ended up bringing all the parts back to my place, so I could be at home yet I was able to keep working.
Each panel/door was made up of seven pieces of solid wood.
There are two stiles, two rails, a mid-stile and the two painted panels.
Here's just a quick look at the parts for the two doors.
Side panels are visible in the background.
To assemble the side panels, I glued the tenons and added some glue in the groove where the tenons will fit.
I used an all-weather wood glue that is made for outdoor applications.
You do not want the glue to be where the painted panels go. You will want them to be "floating" so when the wood expands and contracts during the year, your panels/doors will not crack.
You can see in the photo below, how the pieces are being put together.
Along with a side panel clamped while the glue dries.
I let the panels sit over overnight before I went back into the shop the next day.
The next step was to run the panels/doors through the wide-belt sander to make all of the joints nice and flush.
Starting with 80grit and working my way to the 150 grit sandpaper.
I then hand sanded them with the random orbit hand sander with 120grit sandpaper to remove the cross-grain scratches left by the wide-belt sander.
And finished the sanding with 180grit.
The panels are now ready to be assembled into the stand. And the doors are ready to be stained.
-JASON