Added: 2 years ago
From: ShuffleboardTable
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  • hello

    

  • i was watching beer pong how the hell did i get here?

  • Great video and advice, but he has the definitions backwards. The one that he says you want, where the boards are standing on edge, and where he even has tongue-and-groove samples, is actually called FACE GLUED - you want to avoid EDGE GLUED boards. In other words, the true butcher block that he talks about is face glued, and it shows the edges.

  • You must not understand the point of the video is to show what the edger or end grain of a board is and the difference between this and the face of a board. You want your boards on the edge the stronger part of the board not the face. You want to avoid shuffleboards that have 3 layers of boards stacked together on the face and look for boards that are EDGE GLUED (Not Avoid them)

  • @ShuffleboardTable I understand your point, and I can see where you would call the crossway stacking 'face glued', although in standard woodworking circles, one would see this as 'edge glued' panels stacked on top of each other. The first panel being glued 'horizontally', the second panel 'vertically' and the last panel 'horizontally'. Traditionally 'face glued' boards are where the faces are glued together, mainly for lathe turning blanks, and have the only the edges showing.

  • Hello to all shuffleboard players !

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