I need to buy a relatively large amount of iron on veneer.
Anyone know of any places to buy iron on veneer cheaply?
It seems pretty expensive to me at Bunnings for the amount you get.
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I need to buy a relatively large amount of iron on veneer.
Anyone know of any places to buy iron on veneer cheaply?
It seems pretty expensive to me at Bunnings for the amount you get.
You can make your own using PVA or yellow glue see
http://www.oakwoodveneer.com/tips/ironon.html
There is also sheeet hot melt glue like this
http://www.morganwood.com/catalog/in...ategory_ID=151
which is probably less messy but you would need to order it.
Brims board in Ferntree gully have plenty. So will Allboard distributors in Bayswater.
Has anyone here been able to use iron-on veneer successfully? I have a very poor record when using it. :?
Ditch the iron-on and get some paper backed and use contact adhesive
I agree that the Iron on is rubbish, it shifts around.
but maybe like everything else, its the quality that you buy.
I have veneered two singer machiene cabinates.
one the old way (glue battons and clamps) the other with iron on.
I dont think much time was saved with the iron on. and you can get a wider range of better quality veneer if you go the old way.
Astrid:)
Wixy, I have a heap of ex-Bunnings veneer that I'm interested in selling (I work there, & scored a heap when a store I was at was clearing it out)
Will have a look & see what I have, & figure out a price if you're interested.
Cheers................Sean
Thanks Sean, I might be interested, but I need heaps of the same colour (probably 12 sheets or so).
Taping the join prior to applying heat may help, but I still wouldn't bother with it. They suggest that you first iron on the join area and let it cool down with your nice neat join. Then you go over the rest of the sheet. Thats where the problem lies. What happens to wood fibers when you apply heat? They contract and pull apart the join. I'm only talking about a decent hairline gap, but there should be no gap whatsoever IMHO.
not sure what you mean hereQuote:
Similarly if you make your own then you can use any veneer you can buy or cut?
Sorry if not clear. I meant that if you make your own iron on veneer by using or sawing your own veneer and make it iron on by using either the PVA method or sheet hot melt glue you are not limited to the species sold commercially as iron on veneer. I would have thought the sheet method was only a less messy version of hot hide glue but I was just surmising.