Lowe's arauco plywood
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Lowe's arauco plywood
I want to add one more thing to Bill's note on Lowe's ply--the Arauco 1/2" often has a completley patch-free face on one side. Sometimes only one patch. It even LOOKS high-quality.
Isn't it also FSC certified, from managed forests?
Tom O'Shea
Isn't it also FSC certified, from managed forests?
Tom O'Shea
- Bill Fitzmaurice
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Re: Lowe's arauco plywood
It has the look of a tropical semi-hardwood, so it could be 'farm' raised. Some of the stuff I got was so good on the C side that you could hardly tell it from the A side.Tom O'Shea wrote:I want to add one more thing to Bill's note on Lowe's ply--the Arauco 1/2" often has a completley patch-free face on one side. Sometimes only one patch. It even LOOKS high-quality.
Isn't it also FSC certified, from managed forests?
Tom O'Shea
- Bill Fitzmaurice
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I live in one of the areas where Lowes does not carry this... They'll order single sheets for me, but they cost $43 each.CBIERN wrote:For 23 bucks a sheet it's a bargain.
5 ply clear radiata pine at about $28-32. BB is not available at all locally. Virola and Okume are relatively common (and cheaper than pine) but have veneers that are too thin. In such an environment, do you figure Arauco is worth ordering from Lowes, or should I stick to the radiata pine...which I am using now.
The one bit of good news for SoFla builders is that 1/8 and 3/8 bendy is cheap and easily available in full (4x8), half or quarter sized sheets.
- Bill Fitzmaurice
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Keep in mind you can route a shallow (1/8") dado and remove the veneer from the equation. If it's a matter of $20/sheet for them and $43/sheet for the other stuff, I'd route. It takes about 10-20 minutes to do both sides of a sub. Just make sure you add 1/4" to the panels and it'll end up the same width.fender3x wrote:CBIERN wrote: Virola and Okume are relatively common (and cheaper than pine) but have veneers that are too thin.
- Randall Dibble
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I've resorted to drilling BUNCH holes into all the mating surfaces and then use a big bead glue. I hope the holes act as if they where rivets and hold things together better.
Is there anything wrong with my reasoning??
Is there anything wrong with my reasoning??
We are all immigrants and for most of us we haven't visited home recently, "Africa"!
I don't know if there is or isn't, but you might as well poke a dado in if you've drilled the hole anyway.Randall Dibble wrote:I've resorted to drilling BUNCH holes into all the mating surfaces and then use a big bead glue. I hope the holes act as if they where rivets and hold things together better.
Is there anything wrong with my reasoning??
Come to think of it, there might be a reason to put in a dado: it fills the hole. PL, being a liquid, can leak out before it cures, so it is possible that you could get an air leak that way. I had a few places where when I drilled my dado hole I hit a void or just broke through the side of the plywood accidentaly.
If you slather PL all over a dado what happens is the PL expands and fills any remaining space between the plywood and the dado. You can actually see the plywood bulge from the PL expansion in some places.
- Randall Dibble
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Fewer holes, 1/8 dowels. If you can't find real 1/8 grooved dowel pins, drill the hole 1/16 over size and use smooth 1/8 dowel.Randall Dibble wrote:My drill holes are 1/8 of an inch and spaced every half inch.
Then you do have rivets

If it's too loud, you're even older than me! Like me.
http://www.speakerhardware.com
http://www.speakerhardware.com
Perhaps you misunderstand. Dados aren't drilled, they're routed. Here are a pair of T-39 side panels dadoed for assembly:fender3x wrote: I don't know if there is or isn't, but you might as well poke a dado in if you've drilled the hole anyway.
Come to think of it, there might be a reason to put in a dado: it fills the hole. PL, being a liquid, can leak out before it cures, so it is possible that you could get an air leak that way. I had a few places where when I drilled my dado hole I hit a void or just broke through the side of the plywood accidentaly.

Tim Ard wrote:Perhaps you misunderstand. Dados aren't drilled, they're routed.fender3x wrote: I don't know if there is or isn't, but you might as well poke a dado in if you've drilled the hole anyway.
Come to think of it, there might be a reason to put in a dado: it fills the hole. PL, being a liquid, can leak out before it cures, so it is possible that you could get an air leak that way. I had a few places where when I drilled my dado hole I hit a void or just broke through the side of the plywood accidentaly.
I often misunderstand. This time I think I misspoke

Yours also looks like a good approach, and might take a little less time, at least than the way I did it. I would clamp or screw the pieces together and PL them with no dowels. Then I'd leave them to sit overnight. The next day I would take out the screws or take off the clamps, drill the holes for the dowels, PL eveyything, pop in the dowels, and then let it all sit overnight. Your way is quicker once you have the dados cut.
As far as I can tell, this is what Arauco is. Arauco is the name of the company in Chile that produces the product Lowe's carries. They make it from plantation grown radiata pine trees and use 5 equal-thickness plys.fender3x wrote:CBIERN wrote:5 ply clear radiata pine at about $28-32
"5 ply clear radiata pine" sounds like a generic name for the same product from another company.