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Today in the Shop

Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2011 7:03 pm
by mbcabinetmaker
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Posted: Tue Dec 20, 2011 11:29 pm
by JPG
What isit and whereditgo?:confused:

Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2011 12:50 am
by reible
This must be the new stealth chip board I've heard about, cool stuff.

Ed

Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2011 1:06 am
by JPG
reible wrote:This must be the new stealth chip board I've heard about, cool stuff.

Ed
Not only that, but it comes with layout lines already on it! But some folks do not always line them up!:D

Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2011 2:21 am
by paulmcohen
It is roofing plywood, the lines are used to align the shingles. It is very, very cheap ($6 or less for a 4x8x1/2" sheet). One side is very smooth and the other has a waffle texture like the the back of pegboard. The stuff works very easily with a good carbide blade. I made 5 display pedestals out of one sheet, and when primed and painted they work great. The only issues are the edges are a little fragile and the stuff stinks until primed.

Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2011 11:29 am
by JPG
paulmcohen wrote:It is roofing plywood, the lines are used to align the shingles. It is very, very cheap ($6 or less for a 4x8x1/2" sheet). One side is very smooth and the other has a waffle texture like the the back of pegboard. The stuff works very easily with a good carbide blade. I made 5 display pedestals out of one sheet, and when primed and painted they work great. The only issues are the edges are a little fragile and the stuff stinks until primed.
And what happens when it gets wet?:(

Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2011 2:24 pm
by garys
JPG40504 wrote:And what happens when it gets wet?:(
The same thing as any wood product. It soaks up water and starts to come apart.

Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2011 4:36 pm
by JPG
garys wrote:The same thing as any wood product. It soaks up water and starts to come apart.
Methinks much faster than a board or plywood. Personally I prefer board sheeting(shiplap), but then my domicile is over a half century from being a tree in the forest.

Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2011 4:51 pm
by robinson46176
The newer OSB stuff is better than the stuff from the 1980's. I have some that has been on the south wall of an old barn in full weather unpainted. It has been weathering there for maybe 6 years now and is still solid.
Some I used on an old shed in the 1980's looked like a woolly mammoth in about a year.
I use a lot of it in horse stalls because if they kick through it they may get a few scratches but it breaks with a shaggy edge instead of with long sharp splinters.
Virtually nothing is "bad"... Some stuff is just considered bad if it is used in the wrong application. ;)


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Posted: Wed Dec 21, 2011 5:02 pm
by JPG
[quote="robinson46176"]The newer OSB stuff is better than the stuff from the 1980's. I have some that has been on the south wall of an old barn in full weather unpainted. It has been weathering there for maybe 6 years now and is still solid.
Some I used on an old shed in the 1980's looked like a woolly mammoth in about a year.
I use a lot of it in horse stalls because if they kick through it they may get a few scratches but it breaks with a shaggy edge instead of with long sharp splinters.
Virtually nothing is "bad"... Some stuff is just considered bad if it is used in the wrong application. ]

I assume that wall is vertical(drains quickly!!!).;)

Yes OSB is much gooder than 'particle board'.:eek: