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I am building a stool out of 18mm plywood and would like ideas on how to make it more structurally stable.
I own a jigsaw, drill, random orbital sander, clamps, wood chisel, japanese wood plane, but no table saw or jig for super straight edges and complicated joins.
I have read that I should carve a shallow dado on the underside of the seat, but I am not confident. I am considering adding a corner block. Any advice here? I am a beginner.picture of chair
Underwise from the back. not there are small gaps due to me not cutting 100% straight
holding a potential corner block for reinforcing the joint
Hello @michaelmkchu
That is truly a very creative way to use plywood and turn it into a seat. Your idea of using a corner block should make the seat stable and secure. Will you be using screws to keep the pieces together? If you are, I would also like to suggest using Gorilla 236ml Wood Glue to secure the wood together.
Let me call on our experienced members @Dave-1, @Nailbag and @JoeAzza for their recommendations.
If you need further assistance, please let us know.
Eric
Good Morning @michaelmkchu
Now thats an interesting way of slotting a seat together and having it lock itself together ![]()
I am thinking of adding another block/panel to your project. Located half way between the underside and the front of the foot It spans the width of the underside iof the seat.
So it continues in your slot type building style. You have the two verical slots (In black, thro probarlly only half as long as I have drawn them so it slots)
The blue slash section is the new plywood panel, It spans just shorter then the width of the seat part itself.
Note the "slots" will be cut on an angle, just a little to match the way the feet of the chair are splayed.
You could mark out the angle on the underside by drawing the straight line where I have suggested it up to the feet sides. Then dismantling and extending it through to either side.
Dave
What an awesome project. Following along @EricL suggestion, running a good wood glue along the top of the legs/body is step one. Next I would insert from the top of the seat 4 recessed screws filled and sanded down from the top of the seat. This would be ample without the need for additional blocks.
To me, the potential weakest part of the design is the left/right movement in particular at the lower legs, which I don't think those under seat blocks would help here. Two options would be to either to run a single board across under the seat similar to what @Dave-1 has mentioned. Or if it didn't take too much away from the aesthetics would be to insert an aluminium rod between the legs via recessed holes either side.
Nailbag
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