Reply To: Box design problem
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Can you say more about what the concern is? The box you show can be glued, no problem. Wood changes dimension mostly across the grain and very little along the grain. In your box, you have the grain running along the long dimension of the large panels *and* running along the length of the narrow side panels. When you glue it together, there will be very little movement along the length of the groove, so the joint will be stable. The amount of movement is proportional to how long the dimension in question is. The width of the grooves is across the grain, but the distance is so short (1/4″?) that the total change in size is negligible. So, nothing in the structure will be put in tension or compression.
What’s going to change size is the drawer opening. The width of the opening (the width of the A3) is going to expand and contract with moisture. The height (the height of your stack of paper) will change too, but since that dimension is small, it will not be much.
So the problem you have isn’t gluing the box, it’s making the drawer not stick. This is why cabinets generally have face frames or, in some way, seat the drawer in openings that are defined by grain running lengthwise. If you make your drawer snug in this case and if it dries a bit, it might shrink around the drawer making the drawer impossible to move.
One option is to cut the drawer with generous play so that it cannot bind and use a front on the drawer that is larger than the opening. When the drawer is closed, the front will cover the end grain of the outer box. This will hide the gap between the inner and outer box that you need to leave. Then, in some way, fashion a single runner in the middle of the box for the drawer to run on so that it doesn’t wobble. I’m putting the runner in the middle so that the change in dimension of the outer box doesn’t matter. If you put two runners out at the edges, the will move with the box and cause problems. Or, you could make the inner box in some way look attractive with the gap around it, but that can be hard to do because any misplacement will stand out to the eye as variations in the gap.
I’ve not built something this way, but that’s my guess for what I’d do. Unfortunately, I think the width of A3 is wide enough that there is a real chance of having the drawer bind if you don’t leave room.
(sorry for the multiple edits…kept messing up a critical thing…final try)
- This reply was modified 7 years, 2 months ago by Ed.
- This reply was modified 7 years, 2 months ago by Ed.