Bend a wooden block. Cold bending of wood

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Despite all their strength and durability, wooden parts can be easily and simply bent if suddenly during the construction process you need some special and original oval or round parts. Tree at correct processing can easily be changed in shape, and you can carry out this procedure with your own on our own without resorting to the help of professionals.

Types of work

There are two main ways to bend a tree to the desired shape, and one of them is cold, the other is hot. As the name implies, the methods differ only in the use of hot temperatures; in terms of effectiveness, both of these methods are exactly the same, just hot way fixing the tree is much faster. For each method you will need glue, pva or wallpaper, depending on what you have at hand, you don’t need to buy anything special. And with the help of metal parts you can create a kind of press or frame that will hold the tree in the desired shape. In order to bend the beam, you need to lubricate it with glue, firmly and thoroughly, without fear that the wood will become wet. In fact, under the influence of the adhesive solution, the entire excess moisture will leave the tree, and it will become even more durable and strong, which is extremely important. After the timber has been lubricated with glue, it must be secured using tools in the desired shape, and in the case of a cold work process, simply left fixed to dry. If you choose a hot one, then cover the timber with regular film so that it dries faster and all the moisture evaporates.

Durability

Whichever method is chosen, they are both effective and work the same way. The beam is completely fixed in its new form and will no longer return to the old one. You can bend a wet beam with glue as much as possible without fear that it will break. And as a result, you will receive an original and beautiful piece of furniture or a part to create even more attractive interior house or its facade. The beam bent with glue will not even need to be treated with anything for durability, which is extremely convenient. Moisture will not penetrate through glue solution, and insects will not encroach on a tree that contains much more glue. That is why this method is the most optimal and practical if you urgently need to bend a wooden beam.

Bending wood using steam. Or how to bend strong, unbending oak into the shape you need without any problems.

I have been working with flexible wood for 13 years now and during this time I have built many steaming chambers and tested them in action. different systems steam generation. What you are reading now is based on reading literature and personal practical experience. Even mostly from experience. I usually worked with oak and mahogany (mahogany). I had to deal a little with thin birch veneer. I haven’t tried other breeds because I build and repair boats. Therefore, I cannot judge with authority the work with other species such as cedar, pine, poplar, etc. And since I haven’t done this myself, I can’t judge it. I write here only about what I experienced personally, and not just what I read in a book.

After this introduction, let's get down to business...

To begin with, there are a few basic rules that are always followed.

By steaming wood to bend it, you soften the hemicellulose. Cellulose is a polymer that behaves like thermoplastic resins. (Thanks to John MacKenzie for the last two suggestions).

To do this, you need heat and steam at the same time. I know that in Asia people bend wood over a fire, but that wood is definitely quite wet - usually freshly cut. Shipbuilders in ancient Scandinavia prepared hull materials for their ships and placed them in a saltwater swamp so that they would remain flexible until they were ready for use. However, we are not always able to obtain freshly harvested wood for these purposes, and excellent results can be achieved by using conventional air-dried wood. It would be very good if, a few days before the operation itself, you immerse the workpieces in water so that they gain moisture - those Vikings knew what they were doing. You need warmth and you need moisture.

The main rule concerns steaming time: one hour for every inch of wood thickness.

As I discovered, along with the probability of understeaming the workpiece, there is also the probability of oversteaming it. If you hovered an inch board for an hour and when you tried to bend it, it cracked, do not conclude that the time was not enough. There are other influencing factors that explain this, but we'll get to those later. Steaming the same workpiece for a longer time will not give a positive result. In such a situation, it’s a good idea to have a workpiece of the same thickness as that intended for bending and which you don’t mind. Preferably from the same board. They need to be steamed together and after presumably required time take out a test sample and try to bend it into shape. If it cracks, then let the main workpiece steam for another ten minutes. But no more.

Wood:

Usually, the best option it will if you can find freshly cut wood. I understand that the cabinet makers will shudder at these words. But the fact remains that fresh wood bends better than dry wood. I can take a two meter inch board from white oak, clamp one end of it in a workbench and bend it along any curvature I need - fresh wood is so pliable. However, naturally, it will not remain in this state and you will still have to float it.

In shipbuilding, the main evil is rot. If you are concerned about this issue, then please note that the very fact of steaming fresh wood eliminates its tendency to rot. Therefore, you don’t have to worry - the frames of boats are usually made from fresh steam-bent oak and do not rot if it is taken care of. This also means that in this way it is possible to make at least blanks for the Windsor Chair. However, I also worked a lot with air-dried oak and the result was also excellent.

When selecting wood for bending, one thing to avoid is cross-layering. When trying to bend such a workpiece may burst.

Therefore, regarding wood moisture content, the rules are as follows:

  • Fresh wood is best.
  • Air-dried wood is a second good option.
  • Wood after drying is the third and very far from the first two option.

If all you have is from the dryer and you can’t get anything else - well, then you have no choice. I dealt with this too. But still, if you can get air-dried wood, it will be much better. Just last week I bent 20mm thick walnut boards for the transom of my yacht. The blanks were dried for several years and their bending went completely smoothly.

Steaming chambers.

It is absolutely useless, and even harmful for the bending result, to strive to make an absolutely sealed chamber. The steam must leave it. If you do not provide steam flow through the chamber, you will not be able to bend the workpiece and the result will be as if you steamed it for only five minutes. After all my experiences, this is familiar to me.

Cameras can be the most different forms and sizes. It should be large enough so that the workpiece seems to be suspended and steam flows around all sides of it. A good result will come from pine boards with a cross section of about 50 x 200. One way to ensure that the workpiece is “hung” is to drill through holes in the side walls of the chamber and drive round hardwood wooden rods into it. With their help, the workpiece will not touch the bottom and the area of ​​​​closed wood will be minimal. However, you should not make the chamber so large that the amount of steam generated is not enough to fill its volume. The chamber should be such that it is humid inside and the steam rolls in waves. This means that the dimensions of the chamber must correspond to the capabilities of the steam generator (or vice versa).

When I needed to bend a five-meter mahogany board with a cross-section of about 200 x 20 for the new deckhouse of my yacht, I made a chamber from pine boards with a cross-section of 50 x 300. A 20-liter metal tank acted as a steam generator. The energy source was a propane torch. The thing is absolutely wonderful because it is convenient and mobile. Capacity 45000 BTU (1 BTU ~ 1 kJ). This is an aluminum cylinder with three legs and one burner with a diameter of 200 mm.

I recently discovered in the West Marine catalog propane torch with a capacity of 160,000 BTU for $50 and purchased that too. With its help I can bend frames even for "Constitution".

When I say one hour of steaming per inch of thickness, I mean one hour of SERIOUS CONTINUOUS steaming. Therefore, the boiler must be designed to provide steam for the required time. I used a new 20-liter fuel container for these purposes. You can put workpieces into the chamber only when the installation has reached full power and the chamber is completely filled with steam. We must absolutely ensure that the water does not run out prematurely. If this happens and you have to add water, it is better to give it up. Adding cold water will slow down steam generation.

One way to make the most of the water is to position the chamber at a slight angle so that the condensed water inside flows back into the boiler. But at the same time, it is necessary that the fitting through which the steam enters inside is closer to the far wall. Another way is to make a siphon system to ensure that its level is replenished as the water boils away.

Here's what a photo of such a system looks like:

In the picture you see a wooden camera located slightly at an angle. Directly below it is the steam generator boiler. They are connected to each other via a hose from the radiator. If you look closely, you can see an L-shaped pipe coming out of the base of the boiler on the left. It’s hard to see in the photo, but its vertical part is actually translucent and this way we will know about the water level inside the boiler. To the left of the boiler you can see a white bucket containing water for make-up. Take a closer look and you will notice a brown tube connecting the bucket to the vertical part of the pipe - the level gauge. Since the bucket is located on a hill, a siphon effect is observed: as the water level in the main boiler drops, water enters it from the bucket. You can add it from time to time, but do this extremely carefully so that it does not rush quickly into the boiler and cool it too much.

To minimize the need to add water during the steaming process, it is better to start work with a bucket filled to the top. I myself prefer to leave a small air gap in the boiler.

Many chambers have a door at the end through which workpieces can be moved if necessary and removed if necessary. For example, if you are engaged in the manufacture of bent frames and you would like to complete this as much as possible in a day, you melt the boiler and (when reaching full power) put the first workpiece inside. After 15 minutes, add the second one. After another 15 - the third and so on. When it's time for the first one, you take it out and bend it. I'm assuming this procedure will take less than 15 minutes. When she sits still, the second one is already on the way... etc. This allows you to get a lot of work done and avoid over-steaming.

The door has another important function. It doesn't even have to be made of hard material - on my small camera, just a hanging rag serves for this purpose. I say "hanging" because the steam must emanate outward from the end (since a stream of steam is needed). We must not allow what will happen in the cell overpressure, making it difficult for steam to enter. And besides, the picture itself wooden box, from which steam pours out in clouds, looks quite cool - passers-by are simply dumbfounded. The second purpose of the door is to prevent cold air from entering the chamber from below the workpieces.

So, we will assume that our wood is boiling (with a pleasant smell) and the templates are ready. Try to organize everything in such a way that the operation of removing the workpiece from the chamber and bending it goes quickly and smoothly. Time is of the essence here. You have only a few seconds to do this. As soon as the wood is ready, quickly take it out and immediately bend it. As fast as human dexterity allows. If pressing to the template takes time, just bend by hand (if possible). For the frames of my yacht (which have a double curvature), I took the blanks out of the chamber, stuck one end into the clamp and bent this end and then the other just by hand. Try to provide more bend than is necessary for the template, but not much. And only then attach it to the template.

But I repeat once again - the wood must be given curvature immediately - within the first five seconds. With every second the wood cools, it becomes less pliable.

The length of the blanks and the curvature at the ends.

It is practically impossible to produce blanks of exact length and expect to be able to achieve a bend at the ends. You simply don't have the strength to do it. For this reason, if you need a piece one meter long, but its thickness is more than 6 mm, you are better off cutting a piece about two meters long and bending it. I'm just going by the assumption that you're not in the workshop. hydraulic press- I definitely don’t have one myself. When cutting out a workpiece with a margin, remember that the shorter it is, the more difficult it will be to bend.
And if it is with a reserve, then the end of the real part will have a large curvature - the inch oak boards the last 150 mm are absolutely straight. Depending on the radius required at the end, it may be necessary to resort to wood carving in such areas and to take into account the required thickness when choosing the material.

Templates.

After steaming the workpiece and clamping it onto the template, you must wait a day for complete cooling. When the clamps are removed from the workpiece, it straightens somewhat. The extent of this depends on the structure and type of wood - it is difficult to say in advance. If the workpiece already has some natural bend in the desired direction, which can be taken advantage of (I try to do so whenever possible), the degree of straightening will be less. Therefore, if you require a certain curvature in the final product, the template must have more curvature.

How much bigger?

Here we are dealing with pure black magic and I personally cannot give you any numbers. One thing I know for sure: it is incomparably easier to straighten an excessively bent workpiece than to bend a cold, unbent one (provided that you do not have a giant lever).

Warning. If you bend workpieces for lamination, the template must be exactly the shape of the workpiece in the laminate - I have rarely had cases of large bending of well-bent laminated wood.

There are endless options for bending templates. And it doesn’t matter at all which one you choose if you happen to be the owner of a clamp factory - you can never have too many of them. If wood with a thickness of more than 12 mm is bent, the template must have significant mechanical strength - it will experience quite high loads. You can see what it looks like in the photo at the beginning of the article.
Quite often, when bending people use a metal strip with outside bend. This helps to evenly distribute stress along the length of the workpiece and avoid cracks. This is especially true if the outside fibers are located at an angle to the surface.

Well, that’s probably all my thoughts for now.

If you decide to decorate a room with wood or start creating beautiful furniture in classic style- then you will need to make curved parts. Fortunately, wood is a unique substance because it allows an experienced craftsman to play with the form a little. It's not as difficult as it seems, but not as easy as we would like.

Previously, there was already a publication on the site on bending plywood. In this article we will understand the principles of bending solid board and timber, we’ll find out how they do it in production. We will also give useful tips from professionals who will be useful to the home craftsman.

Why bending is better than sawing

Curvilinear wooden part can be obtained by two methods: by bending a flat workpiece, or by cutting out the required spatial shape. The so-called “sawing” method attracts users with its simplicity. For such production of parts and structures, you do not need to use complex devices, you do not have to spend a lot of time and effort. However, in order to cut out a curvilinear wooden product, it is necessary to use a workpiece that is obviously too large, and a lot of valuable material will be irretrievably lost as waste.

But main problem are the performance characteristics of the parts obtained. When cutting a curved part from a regular edged lumber, the wood fibers do not change their direction.
As a result, cross sections fall into the radius zone, which not only worsen appearance, but also significantly complicate the subsequent finishing of the product, for example, its milling or fine grinding. In addition, in the rounded areas that are most vulnerable to mechanical stress, the fibers run across the section, which makes the part prone to fracture in this place.

Whereas when bending, the opposite picture is usually observed, when the wood only becomes stronger. On the edges curved beam or the boards do not come out with “end” fiber cuts, so subsequently such workpieces can be processed without restrictions, using all standard operations.

What happens in wood when it bends?

Bending technology is based on the ability of wood, while maintaining its integrity, to change its shape within certain limits as force is applied, and then retain it after the mechanical impact is removed. However, we all know that without preparatory activities lumber is elastic - that is, it returns to its original state. And if the applied forces are too great, then the beam or board simply breaks.

Layers of a wooden workpiece do not work equally when bent. Outside the radius the material is stretched, inside it is compressed, and in the middle of the array the fibers practically do not experience significant loads and have little resistance to the forces acting on the workpiece (this inner layer called "neutral"). With critical deformation, the fibers at the outer radius break, and at the inner radius, “folds” usually form, which are a fairly common defect when bending soft wood. Fibers of plastic hardwood or softwood can shrink by 20 percent or more, while the tensile limit is about one to one and a half percent.

That is, to determine the possibility of bending (without destruction) more important indicator there will be a limit to the relative elongation of the stretched layer. It directly depends on the thickness of the part and determines the radius that needs to be obtained. The thicker the workpiece and the smaller the radius, the greater will be the relative elongation along the fibers. Having data on the physical properties of popular wood species, it is possible for each of them to formulate the maximum possible ratio of thickness and radius of parts. In numbers it will look like this:

Bending using a steel bar

Bending without using a tire

These data indicate that softwood lumber, in comparison with dense hardwoods, is less suitable for free bending. To work with lumber at aggressive radii, it is necessary to use combined methods preliminary preparation parts and mechanical protection.

Tire as an effective way to avoid wood destruction during bending

Since the main problem is fiber breakage on the outer radius side, it is this surface of the workpiece that needs to be stabilized somehow. One of the most common methods is to use an overhead splint. The tire is a steel strip with a thickness of half a millimeter to two millimeters, which covers the beam or board along the outer radius and bends on the template along with the wood. The elastic strip absorbs part of the energy when stretched and at the same time redistributes the destructive load along the length of the workpiece. Thanks to this approach, coupled with humidification and heating, the permissible bending radius is reduced significantly.

In parallel with the use of steel tires in bending devices and machines, they achieve mechanical seal wood. This is done using a pressing roller, which presses on the workpiece along the outer bending radius. In addition, the template form in such a device is often equipped with 3 mm teeth (in increments of about 0.5 cm), oriented towards the movement of the workpiece.

The purpose of the jagged surface of the template is to prevent the workpiece from slipping, to prevent mutual shift of the fibers in solid wood, and also create a small depressed corrugation in the concave radius of the part (the fibers are pressed inside the array, therefore, problems with folds are solved).

Pressing with a tire allows you to bend bars and boards made of coniferous and soft deciduous wood with a minimum percentage of defects. Please note that parts made of relatively hard wood when bent with pressing become approximately ten to twelve percent thinner, and pine and spruce blanks become 20-30% thinner. But the positive aspects of this method include a significant increase in strength characteristics finished product, as well as a significant reduction in requirements for the presence of flaws and defects in wood blanks.

How to improve the plasticity of wood

In normal condition, lumber has elasticity, significant spatial rigidity and resistance to compression. Wood receives these valuable properties from lignin, a natural “mesh” polymer that gives plants a stable shape and strength. Lignin is located in the intercellular space and in cell walls, connecting cellulose fibers. Coniferous wood contains about 23-38 percent of it, and deciduous wood contains up to 25 percent.

Essentially, lignin is a kind of glue. We can soften it and turn it into a “colloidal solution” if we heat the lumber by steaming, boiling, electric shock high frequency(a household microwave is also suitable for small parts). After the lignin has melted, the workpiece is bent and fixed - as it cools, the molten lignin hardens and prevents the wood from returning to its original shape.

Practice shows that optimal temperature for bending solid wood (block, strip, board) it will be 100 degrees Celsius. This temperature must be obtained not on the surface, but inside the workpiece. Therefore, the time of temperature exposure will largely depend on how massive the part is. The thicker the part, the longer it will have to be heated. For example, if you use steaming to prepare for bending a 25 mm thick rail (with a humidity of about 28-32%), then on average it takes about 60 minutes. It is noteworthy that the steam exposure time for parts of similar dimensions for any species is approximately the same.

By the way, it is believed that it is also impossible to overheat the part, since lignin after hardening may lose its elasticity and become too brittle.

The boiling method is not often used, since the workpiece is heavily and unevenly moistened, and such water-saturated fibers and cells can tear when bent, at least with the formation of lint. After cooking, the parts have to dry for too long. But this method works well if you need to process only part of the workpiece for bending.

Steaming allows the workpiece to be heated evenly, and its output humidity tends to approach the optimum. The most suitable humidity for achieving maximum ductility of lumber is considered to be in the range of 26-35 percent (the moment of saturation of wood fibers).

To steam wood for bending at home, use homemade cylindrical chambers made of metal/polymer pipes or rectangular boxes made of wood. Heating tanks act as a source of steam, electric kettles and other similar devices that can provide a temperature of about 105 degrees and low pressure. This is always followed by the stage of drying the part (+ holding the fixed shape) to about fifteen percent and finishing it.

Chemical methods for plasticizing wood

It is also known that it is possible to make lumber more pliable using impregnation with various compounds. There are ready-made impregnations that make wood cells more plastic, for example, “Super-Soft 2”. Some practitioners soak wood in so-called textile conditioners, obtaining a similar result.

But quite primitive “recipes” can also be used containing ammonia and ethyl alcohol, glycerin, alkalis, hydrogen peroxide, dissolved alum... Many of them act extremely simply - they increase the ability of the workpiece to absorb water and help retain moisture in the fibers.

Thin products such as veneer are processed by spraying, but preparatory chemical impregnation of normal lumber is usually carried out using the full immersion method. It takes time for the working substances to get inside the bar or slats, usually from 3-5 hours to several days (although heating helps reduce the wait).

Largely due to the length of the processes chemical plasticization they are not used often, although there are other problems: the cost of chemicals, changes in colors, the need to provide protection from harmful fumes, the increased tendency of such curved parts to straighten...

Tips for bending lumber using hydrothermal preparation

  • Select the quality of the blanks for bending very carefully. It is better not to use material with cracks, knots (even live and fused ones), or sloping fibers. If there are no options for this, then orient the part in the bending device (machine or template) so that the defects fall into the concave radius zone, and not into the tension zone at the outer radius. Give preference to the splint bending method.
  • When selecting a workpiece, it is necessary to provide for a change in the size of the part after molding. For example, the thickness of a coniferous beam can be reduced by 30 percent if bending with pressing is performed.
  • Even if you are planning an extensive finishing- do not leave too much material. The thinner the workpiece, the easier it bends without breaking.
  • If the amount of work is small, then it is better not to cut out the workpieces, but to prick them from lumps. This way it is possible to avoid cutting the fibers and, as a result, defects during bending.
  • For bending, it is advisable to use lumber with natural moisture. If you use dry workpieces, then preference should be given to those that have not been processed in drying chamber, and were dried under a canopy - in an atmospheric way.
  • After steaming, work with softened wood very quickly, as lignin begins to harden almost immediately, especially in the most vulnerable outer layers of solid wood. Usually you need to focus on a time reserve of half an hour to 40 minutes, so there is no point in making large cameras if you simply do not have time to install all the material from them into templates.
  • Place the material in the steaming chamber so that the surfaces facing the outer radius are freely exposed to the steam jets.
  • To save time, many carpenters refuse to use templates with clamps. Instead, they use metal brackets and wedges or stop posts on the templates.
  • Keep in mind that a curved bar or rail will still tend to straighten. And this straightening always occurs by a few percent. Therefore, when high precision in the manufacture of a part is required, it is necessary to conduct tests and, based on the results obtained, adjust the shape of the template (reduce the radius).
  • After the part has cooled in the mold, let it stand some more. Some experienced furniture makers prefer to cure for 5-7 days. The tire, as a rule, is left attached to the part during this entire time.

If there is a need to develop a curved element made of wood, then most likely you will encounter a number of difficulties. At first glance, it will seem that it will be easier to cut out the required element in a curved form, but in this option, the wood fibers will be cut and weaken the reliability of the part. Plus, during execution there is a very large consumption of material.

Stages of work on bending boards at home:

Wood is cellulose fibers bound together by lignin. Placing the fibers in a straight line affects the flexibility of the wood material.

Tip: durable and reliable material Wood can be used to make all kinds of products only if the wood is perfectly dried. However, a change in the form of dry wood harvesting is sufficient labor-intensive process, because dry wood can break easily.

Having studied the technology of bending wood, including its basic physical properties wood, allowing you to change its shape, it is quite possible to make bending wood material V artisanal conditions .

Specifics of working with wood

Bending of wood material is accompanied by its deformation, stretching of the outer layers and compression of the inner ones. It happens that the tensile force leads to rupture of the outer fibers. This can be prevented by carrying out preliminary hydrothermal finishing.

Can bend timber blanks made from laminated and solid wood. Plus, to give the desired shape, peeled and planed veneer is used. It is considered the most plastic hardwood. Which includes beech, birch, hornbeam, ash, maple, oak, linden, poplar and alder. Glued bent blanks are best made from birch veneer. It should be noted that in the total volume of such blanks, about 60% falls on birch veneer.

By production technology bent wood, when the workpiece is steamed, its ability to compress significantly increases, specifically by a third, while the ability to stretch increases by only a few percent. Thanks to this, you can’t even think about bend tree thicker than 2 cm.

How bend board in artisanal conditions: heating in steam box

First of all, you need to prepare a steam box, which can be made with my own hands. Its main task is to restrain the tree, which is required bend. There must be a hole in it that is designed for steam to escape. Otherwise, an explosion may occur under pressure.

This hole should be located in the bottom of the box. Plus, in the box you need to calculate a removable lid through which you can remove bent wood, as soon as it receives the required form. In order to hold the bent wood blank in the required shape, it is necessary to use special clamps. They can be done without outside help made of wood or purchased at a building materials store.

Several round scraps are made from wood. Holes are drilled in them, offset from the center. After this, you need to push the bolts through them, and then drill another through the sides to push them in firmly. Such simple crafts can perfectly serve as clamps.

Now you can start steaming the wood. To do this, you need to close the wood blank in a steam box and worry about the heat source. For every 2.5 cm of product thickness, the time spent on steaming will be approximately an hour. After its expiration, the tree should be removed from the box and given the required shape by bending it. The process should be performed quickly enough, and the bending itself should be done gently and carefully.

Tip: due to varying degrees of flexibility, some types of wood will bend more easily than others. Any method requires the application of varying amounts of force.

As soon as the result you want is achieved, the bent workpiece must be secured in this position. Fastening a tree is possible during the process of its development new form, making it easier to control the process.

How bend board in artisanal conditions using chemical impregnation

Since lignin is responsible for the stability of wood, its bonds with the fibers must be broken. This is achieved chemically, and it is quite possible to do this in artisanal conditions. Best suited for such purposes ammonia. The workpiece is soaked in a 25% aqueous solution of ammonia, which significantly increases its plasticity. Likewise, it will be possible bend, twist it or squeeze out some relief shapes under pressure.

Advice: you should look at the fact that ammonia is dangerous! Due to this, while working with it, it is necessary to strictly adhere to all safety regulations. Soaking of wood must be carried out in a tightly closed container, which is located in a well-ventilated area.

The longer the wood is soaked in an ammonia solution, the more plastic it will become later. After soaking the workpiece and developing its new shape, it is necessary to leave it in a similar curved form. This is necessary not only to fix the shape, but also to evaporate the ammonia. However, bent wood must be left in a ventilated area. It is noteworthy that when the ammonia has evaporated, the wood fibers will acquire the same reliability as before, which will enable the workpiece to retain its own shape!

How bend board in artisanal conditions: layering method

First you need to harvest wood, which will subsequently be prone to bending. It is very, very important that the boards are slightly longer than the length required part. This can be explained by the fact that the bending tames the lamellas. Before you start cutting, you will need to draw a straight line diagonally with a pencil. This must be done across bottom side workpieces, which will provide an opportunity to preserve their order after moving the lamellas.

The boards must be cut with a straight edge, and not at all front side. Likewise, they can be put together with the least amount of change. A layer of cork is applied to the mold, which can help avoid any unevenness in the shape of the saw and will provide the opportunity to make a more even bend. Plus, the cork will prevent delamination in the mold. After that, glue is applied to the upper side of one of the lamellas with a roller.

It is best to use urea-formaldehyde glue, consisting of two parts. It has a high level of adhesion, but takes a long time to dry. You can also apply resin to epoxy based, but such a composition will cost a lot of money, and absolutely not everyone can afford it. The standard version of wood glue is not suitable for this type of application. Although it will dry quickly, it is considered too soft, which is not at all welcome in this option.

Product from bent wood need to fit into the mold as quickly as possible. So, another one is placed on the lamella coated with glue. The process must be repeated until the bent workpiece receives required thickness. The boards are fixed together. After the glue has completely dried, it is necessary to shorten it to the required length.

How bend board in artisanal conditions: cut through

The prepared piece of wood needs to be sawn through. The cuts are calculated at 2/3 of the thickness of the workpiece. They must be located inside the bend. You need to be very careful, as rough cuts can easily deform the tree and even completely break it.

Tip: The key to cutting success is to keep the distance between cuts as even as possible. The best option 1.25 cm.

The cuts are made across the grain of the wood. Afterwards you need to compress the edges of the workpiece, which will make it possible to combine the resulting cracks into a single whole. This is the shape the bend takes upon completion of the work. After which he is corrected. In many cases, the outer side is finished with veneer, less often with laminate. This impact will give you the opportunity to correct the bend and hide almost any defects made during manufacturing. Gaps in bent tree they are hidden quite easily - for this, sawdust and glue are mixed, after which the gaps are filled with the mixture.

Regardless of the bend option, as soon as the workpiece is removed from the mold, the bend will relax a little. In view of this, it must be made a little larger in order to compensate for this effect later. The sawing method is used when bending a metal corner or part of a box.

So, using such tips you can big problems bend wood with your own hands.

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One of the ways to process carpentry blanks is bending. Treated with hot steam wooden blanks are able to bend and retain their shape after drying. Such technological process is not particularly difficult, but some features of how to bend wood should be taken into account. You may also be interested in pine stairs, which you can order on the website http://mirdereva.ru/.

Wood fibers are held together by a special substance - lignin, which, under the influence high temperature softens, and after cooling again binds the fibers. The process of bending blanks is based on this. It should be borne in mind that wood of different species can be bent in its own way. For bent products It is best to use oak, beech, birch, yew, cherry, elm. But pine, spruce, cedar, and alder should not be used for these purposes.

Work on bent parts starts with the choice of material. The workpieces must be straight-grained; the use of wood with curved fibers is not allowed. The prepared material is dried in natural conditions, under canopies, to a moisture content of no more than 20%. But artificially dried wood should not be used for bending, since it is less amenable to such processing. If you have to use such material, then before bending it must be soaked in water (at least a week). Soaking is also necessary for hard wood such as oak, ash, and beech.

To heat the workpieces before bending, it is best to use a steam chamber. It is easy to make such a camera at home using plastic pipe suitable sizes and regular kettle. The parts are placed in a pipe, and steam is supplied from the kettle. The exposure time in the chamber depends on the size of the part and is determined experimentally. In this case, you can be guided by the fact that for 1 cm of the thickness of the workpiece, 30-40 minutes of steaming the wood are required.

In places of bending on parts, if the design of the product allows it, you can slightly reduce the thickness of the material and remove the chamfers. This will make the bending process easier. Thin workpieces, in the absence of a steam chamber, can be heated over an electric or gas stove.

Before you start bending wood, you need to prepare a form on which the part will be fixed, and clamps for fixation. It should be borne in mind that after heating the wood, there will be very little time to fix the workpiece, no more than 5 minutes. Therefore, everything needs to be done quickly, but if the part begins to cool, then it should be heated again. Otherwise, the workpiece may break.

Therefore, it is important to provide a design of molds and clamps that would allow the workpiece to be quickly fixed in the desired position. If the molds are made of wood, they should not be covered with any protective compounds, paint, varnish. Firstly, they deteriorate from heating, and secondly, they will interfere with the drying of the workpieces.

Short blanks are bent on mandrels of a larger radius, and then secured in a mold. This pre-bending reduces the likelihood that the part will break as the bend is formed. You need to keep the parts in shape until they dry completely so that they do not bend back. This usually takes 6 to 9 days and is determined empirically.

After freeing the workpiece from the clamps, it must be put aside for a day, and only then begin processing and finishing. This is necessary in order to relieve residual extension stresses. The tips are simple, but they will allow you to easily master the process of bending wood.

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