I'm thinking of building a TV cabinet that will obviously have to hold quite a lot of weight. Is MDF suitable for this?
Thanks
Gareth
Thanks
Gareth
So tell use, dude, just what do you know that the rest of us don't? MDF is an excellent low-cost material which is highly consistent and can be made into loads of stuff. That's why I used to make batches of veneered and lipped MDF TV/video stands - and why I still turn out the odd one or two There is a knack to designing anything made from sheet materials so that it doesn't sag, but even there there's an on-line calculator, the Sagulator, which will allow you to calculate the amount of "droop" a given material will display under load. Take a look.ModernMaterials said:No its not
I'd suggest reading something other than the Daily Express if I were you MDF most certainly hasn't been banned in the USA, there isn't any talk of it there, and in any case one of the world's largest manufacturers of MDF, the Weyerhaeuser Corporation (of Medite fame) just happens to be American! They even developed a special zero formaldehyde version of their product for use in the Smithsonian Institute archival section, medical labs, etc.ModernMaterials said:Thats why the Americans have banned it.
Can't dispute the small particles bit, however I suppose the "nasty glue" is a reference to the use of formaldehyde contained in glues. For a number of years now all MDF produced within the EU has met what is called the E1 formaldehyde standard - in other words if unsealed it outgasses at less than the recommended domestic exposure factor of 0.1 parts per million. In view of the fact that most furniture producrs are sealed, either by painting or lacquering this level drops even further.ModernMaterials said:its just really small particles of wood moulded with nasty glue.
Oh no they haven't, it's just rumoursModernMaterials said:Thats why the americans have banned it.
Scrit said:it outgasses at less than the recommended domestic exposure factor of 0.1 parts per million. .
Scrit
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