Wood Panels and Humidity
Coping with wood movement
All wood workers need to be aware of wood movement when building
furniture projects. Failure to consider this important factor
can cause wood panels to crack or split.
My high school biology teacher compared the structure of a piece
of wood with a bundle of straws. The straws represent the cells
and capillaries of the wood. When a tree is growing water and
food are transferred up through the cells and are carried
throughout the tree.
Once a tree is fell the free water in the wood is lost rather
quickly but the bound water trapped in the straw like cell is
slower to dissipate. As the level of bound water is reduced
these straw like cells get narrower in diameter but maintain
their length. This is the fundamental reason that wood expands
and contracts across its width but has almost no expansion
length wise.
When working with wood it is very important to allow the wood to
expand and contract with changes in humidity. As humidity rises
the straw like cells expand in diameter with the opposite effect
occurring as the relative humidity falls.
Ways to accommodate expansion
Lets use a cutting board for the first example. A solid wood
cutting board with a bread board edge secured with a tongue and
groove joint. One edge has the bread board edge secured on both
ends with a dowel through the tongue The other bread board edge
is secured with the same tongue and groove joint but this end
only has a dowel in the center of the piece.
The end secured with two dowels will develop a crack in the main
panel. Since the length of the edge piece doesn't change having
it fixed across the width of the main panel from expanding.
Alternatively, the opposite end of the cutting board is only
fixed in the center. The main panel is free to expand and
contract towards the ends. The only visual difference would be
that the ends of the edge piece are no longer flush with the
edge of the main panel.
The second example uses a large glued up panel such as a table
top. If the table top was fixed to the rails across the width of
the panel the rise and fall of humidity would undoudtable cause
the panel to split.
The best method to overcome this is use wooden clip to attach
the two pieces. A 1/4" x 1/4" dado milled on the inside upper
edge of the rails. This accepts a wooden clip that fits into the
dado and is then secures to the underside of the table top. This
will security hold the top hold the top onto the rails without
restricting the expansion and contraction of the large panel.
Without this the table top would slowly start to open up.
In general anytime you are fixing one piece of stock across a
large glued up panel measures need to be taken to allow the
panel to move. Remember that it will expand across its width but
not its length. Using one of the two methods mentioned above you
will be able to prevent your glued up panels from splitting.