The Truth About PARTICLE BOARD...Is It The Worst Material?! (Pros + Cons...Particle Board)

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  • čas přidán 15. 07. 2024
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    Particle board is everywhere in the world of cabinet furniture...but should you use it for your projects? This short video from The Honest Carpenter will explain the pros and cons of particle board!
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    The Truth About PARTICLE BOARD...Is It The Worst Material?! (Pros + Cons...Particle Board)
    Particle board is an engineered wood product, similar to MDF and OSB. It is made of compressed wood fibers mixed with 10% resin and glue, and pressed into sheets or panels.
    MDF (Medium Density Fiberboard) is essentially a higher grade panel than particle board, which is an LDF (Low Density Fiberboard).
    Particle board is prone to deterioration and fracturing at the edges. It is also highly susceptible to moisture penetration. However, due to its layering, it has a greater surface density than plywood and natural wood products.
    Much particle board is sold with veneered faces of a plasticky white laminate known as melamine.
    Melamine particle board makes a very good material surface for craft tables.
    Raw particle board sheets are also sometimes used as a sacrificial subfloor material in dry work places. However, they are not code worthy, and therefore shouldn't be used as subfloor in a residential home.
    THANKS FOR WATCHING!
    The Honest Carpenter
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Komentáře • 376

  • @repapeti98
    @repapeti98 Před 2 lety +32

    I can tell you this much, when people bring their old kitchen cabinets to us as firewood, it's surprisingly easy to break apart by stomping on it.

    • @CemKalyoncu
      @CemKalyoncu Před 2 lety +14

      I am not sure it would be safe to burn them, binder might contain toxic chemicals when burned.

    • @stanimir4197
      @stanimir4197 Před 2 lety +3

      @@CemKalyoncu not in the EU at least

  • @FelipeGonzalezHerrera
    @FelipeGonzalezHerrera Před 2 lety +39

    I'm pretty shure everything wrong in my life right now is because everytime I've "knocked on wood" and it was particle board.

  • @Kevan808
    @Kevan808 Před 2 lety +51

    We learned the hard way when we were a young married couple that shelves made with this material, though cheap, was completely useless within 6 months. Spend the money on decent furniture.

    • @ghostridergale
      @ghostridergale Před 2 lety +10

      Funny part is, a lot f people think cause a piece of furniture is heavy that it’s made of quality materials. Sorry wrong! Particleboard or chipboard very heavy compared to most hardwoods. Other thing is, furniture store salesman con customers legally. Long as there’s even one tiny piece of hardwood on furniture the stores or salesman can legally say the furniture made of solid wood. I’ve had this conversation with so many people saying their furniture they bought is all solid wood. Now with almost all furniture there’s some area where you can see the edge of the materials and I’ve turned furniture around or flipped it over and low and behold there’s the raw edge of particleboard! Needless to say the people are not happy and shocked what they bought! Furniture stores or their sales y don’t like me very much cause when they tell me their furniture made of solid wood, I’m quick to show them it’s not!
      Now with all that being said, if the furniture is actually made of all solid wood, it needs to be in consistent temperature away from moisture. Changes in temperature and/or moist areas will make the solid wood warp, twist, shrink or swell. Any place where the wood glued together like a dinning table or a side of a cabinet where there’s joints that has two or more boards glued together. Those glued joints are prone to fail and split apart. For example I’ve had numerous people have wood stoves or large windows (Sun generates a lot of heat thru windows) not too far from their dinning room table and chairs that’s has their table and chairs split apart at the joints in numerous places. Some cases the joints can be Glued again and clamped together till the glue dries. But not always a easy project to do and get it where it looked like new again without some sanding and refinish work. So as nice it is to have a real solid wood piece of furniture, it does need special care to lasts a long time. Plywood with veneer is much more stable and can handle some temperature changes better then solid wood and can look just as nice in many cases. If your wanting furniture that can take a little more abuse plywood a better choice with the exception that if plywood veneer gets damaged you may not be able to repair the veneer damage. Especially if the veneer is a import product since the veneer is so thin on the plywood that it’s literally less then paper thin. Domestic veneer on plywood is usually over a 1/16” thick giving you some veneer to work with if it gets damaged. You can steam the veneer with a iron and a wet cloth that will raise the grain and make it so you have less sanding to do to make your veneer look like new again if necessary! Usually not that lucky with a import veneer plywood! Of course solid wood you can steam and sand a lot and never worry you’ll sand thru a veneer! They all have their advantages and disadvantages depending on damage?

    • @klizzyykicks1712
      @klizzyykicks1712 Před 2 lety +3

      I use particle board shelves in my garage and they have held up for a year with no problem…I put heavy totes on them and they hold just great

    • @ghostridergale
      @ghostridergale Před 2 lety +2

      Your one of the first I’ve seen mention the pros and cons of particleboard or chipboard. One that you missed with the melamine is there’s also another brand called Coretron
      and I may of spelled it wrong? But how the word sounds anyway! Another issue you didn’t bring up though with these vinyls on particleboard is the fact that the vinyl will shrink with a little heat. If the material near a windows where the sun hits it the vinyl will shrink leaving raw particleboard showing on the face of the boards. Unfortunately there’s very little you can do to fix it once it shrinks either! It certainly doesn’t look pretty after it shrinks and you can see the particleboard on the outside of the cabinets! Plastic laminate be more expensive to cover materials with and it’s capable of shrinking as well. But usually more stable than the vinyl is! Personally I’m not a fan of particleboard nor any of the vinyl veneers on particleboard and I’ve had to replace both numerous times over the years that was only a year old after installing it.
      Set cheap cabinetry next to good quality cabinets and when both are brand new you can’t notice much difference in looks. But take those same cabinetry and look at them side by side even a year later and there will be a huge difference how well they hold up! Although hardware quality is every bit as important too! Cheap hardware won’t hold up long either!

    • @drasco61084
      @drasco61084 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ghostridergale fairly recently Stumpy Nubs posted a video showing the construction of an antique chest of drawers. Very interesting, carpenters have understood the way wood moves for a long time and taken that into account when building but lots of new stuff is just built to a price just to make a buck and ends up in the trash when you move somewhere else...

    • @robertcoogan1070
      @robertcoogan1070 Před 2 lety +2

      Same. My wife and I bought some Ashley furniture and found out the hard way.

  • @DCgamer723
    @DCgamer723 Před 2 lety +37

    The melamine coated boards are good for mold making. Specifically for epoxy or concrete molds because of the glossy surface. Have used it a few times for making custom concrete slabs for flower pots.

  • @billb.2673
    @billb.2673 Před 2 lety +17

    I’ve been a Facility Manager for 23 years and our department absolutely loathes this stuff. Every time we get a work order from some well intentioned employee who ordered a piece of office furniture made from this crap we cringe. I can’t begin to tell you the number of times we’ve had to send stuff back (really fun process) because some component has been damaged, usually along the weak edges as you point out. If by some miracle it arrived unscathed, we’re usually carting it out to the dumpster in a year anyway because it’s fallen apart. At least it’s easy to carry it out there.

    • @aylife1526
      @aylife1526 Před rokem

      😂😂😂😂😂 I'm in the first year of my wood custom build business, and one of the things I build is custom wooden bed frames outta real wood due to my personal experience with my frame falling apart because of this crap 😂😂😂😂 before I became a carpenter.

  • @kathleenreynolds6492
    @kathleenreynolds6492 Před 2 lety +41

    Really good review. There is a use for lesser quality products and knowing how to make that decision, when to use, or not use it, is important. I recently re-did my sewing room using all IKEA products. It works well. It won’t get hard or long use (because of my age) but was very easy for me to assemble alone, came in modular units, and was affordable. I now have a space that looks very nice and is both functional and practical.

    • @GeeCeeAte
      @GeeCeeAte Před rokem +3

      I have an ikea desk and table that have been with me through 6 different houses! They outlast any type of cabinet or desk I’ve ever bought from Lowe’s, HD, Staples etc

  • @dougdiplacido2406
    @dougdiplacido2406 Před 2 lety +8

    I use particle board as sacrificial surfaces on my work benches. Once on side gets dinged up I flip it over so I get double duty out of it. Great review.

    • @curtislear4842
      @curtislear4842 Před rokem

      I just took an old entertainment center (all particle board), ripped all of it into usable pieces and topped my workbench with it. Glad to see I'm not the only one that uses that idea.

  • @maximflor
    @maximflor Před 2 lety +28

    It all depends on the project. I made a home library with cabinets about 25 years ago from melamine coated particle boards, and it still holds as good as new.

    • @AleksandrPanzinAlex
      @AleksandrPanzinAlex Před 2 lety +1

      Right tool(material in this case) for the job - as always.

    • @roccoconte2960
      @roccoconte2960 Před 2 lety

      i have found that screws dont hold in it.

    • @LykeArgy
      @LykeArgy Před rokem +1

      ​@@roccoconte2960 well the mix of pre drilling and using dowels and glue makes it pretty freaking strong, especially when making kitchens where you have multiple elements fixed together and supporting each part from multiple ways

  • @arduinoatolyem2121
    @arduinoatolyem2121 Před 2 lety +4

    In Turkey we have a lot of budget tables made with particle board. In our house we have 6 tables made by this thing but there's no problem of expanding due to high humidity.

  • @robinrummel1359
    @robinrummel1359 Před 2 lety +9

    Interesting information. I realized a long time ago that true solid wood is a lot lighter weight than MDF or particle board. I also found out from the particle board used as subfloor under the carpet in my house that it's terrible used that way! There is another plywood subfloor under the particle board but that particle board is nasty! As carpet and vinyl flooring have been removed so has the particle board and another layer of plywood put down in it's place.

  • @kristofbarta2964
    @kristofbarta2964 Před 2 lety +12

    It's used as sub flooring in movie sets. In two overlapping layers it is quite durable. It's also used for restoring period veneered furniture, marquetry even.

  • @tomrobison4274
    @tomrobison4274 Před 2 lety +4

    I was at my local Lowes the other day and MDF was $60.00 for a 4’ X 8’ X 3/4” sheet. Wood products are insanely priced these days. Tom R

  • @tonywilliamson1474
    @tonywilliamson1474 Před 2 lety

    All the videos on CZcams are great but you all have great tools in your workshop this makes it a lot easier for you
    Tony

  • @nothingmuch2023
    @nothingmuch2023 Před 2 lety

    You've done nice work making the acoustics better in your new workshop! Thanks.

  • @kencoleman7762
    @kencoleman7762 Před 2 lety +2

    I appreciate video and I enjoy your clear descriptions. I don’t hear the word "frangible" used very often.

  • @jtotheb-ip2hh
    @jtotheb-ip2hh Před 7 měsíci +2

    thanks for the helpful info, once again! i've built out 3 closets in my home with the melamine boards from home depot and they are all holding strong, 3 years running. if you "design around the material" so to speak, it can be great, low-cost stuff.

  • @joeolejar
    @joeolejar Před 2 lety +3

    When I was a young parent, I made book shelves for the kids with partical board. Fortunately no long spans were involved. Only one small one survived. I graduated to birch plywood in their middle school years. All of that still is around.

  • @miguelromero1
    @miguelromero1 Před 2 lety

    Love all ur vids. Very informative and straight to the point

  • @Toyotajunkie
    @Toyotajunkie Před 2 lety +3

    Agreed... great for melamine work surface, but pretty horrible for anything else. Especially when moisture is an issue.

  • @21thTek
    @21thTek Před 9 měsíci +1

    One of the best wood working channels on youtube. Always great and focus content. I really like and apreciate his videos ! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @redharrier8273
    @redharrier8273 Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you! I am never disappointed by your videos - you make it easy to understand for a beginner DIY-er, aka, me 😀

  • @merlin711oregon
    @merlin711oregon Před rokem

    Perfectly clear explanation! Thanks!

  • @mvblitzyo
    @mvblitzyo Před 2 lety +1

    exceptional explanation , great information .. another great educational video .

  • @a9ball1
    @a9ball1 Před 2 lety +9

    You missed one large use for particle board, building speaker enclosures. It is the one of the best and most used choices for it. Some expensive brands use it.

    • @JS-tb9hu
      @JS-tb9hu Před 2 lety +2

      What makes it better than some of the other woods for speakers?

    • @PeKlim
      @PeKlim Před 2 lety +2

      @@JS-tb9hu Maybe omnidirectional resonation? Normal wood has direction of fibers so it will resonate diferently in diferent directions. I am guessing.

    • @FEMADEATHCAMPCONTROL
      @FEMADEATHCAMPCONTROL Před 2 lety +2

      @@PeKlim I think it would be its sound insulation qualities maybe. Reflecting sound back out of the front.

    • @a9ball1
      @a9ball1 Před 2 lety +2

      @@PeKlim it is more dense and has less vibration, no hollow spots and of course the lower cost. There are probably others but that's the reasons given to me when I started making custom enclosures.

    • @ItsAsparageese
      @ItsAsparageese Před 2 lety

      Question, if you're willing -- does it help absorb/insulate against bass frequencies, d'you think?
      I'm building a tiny house trailer & need all the bass insulation I can get, so I'll be lining the walls/joints of all types with loads of rubber ... But I'd cut weight from my materials elsewhere in order to add particle board to my walls, and take the time to waterproof the hell out of each panel of it first, if there's decent evidence that it would help reduce vibrations from bass and/or the road. If it does enough to reduce the amount of rubber that might be good for costs, and rubber ain't exactly lightweight either so it could work out, idk, just seeking thoughts on cheap materials and hadn't previously heard of particle board being useful in the context of sound.
      No pressure to take time answering unless it's convenient for you of course! Thanks in advance for any help, to OP or anyone else :D

  • @kenstarthree-six5429
    @kenstarthree-six5429 Před rokem

    Wow this is amazing, I'm getting all this wisdom because someone from my apartment threw out a damaged Ikea shelf.
    And yes I did drag it back home with me this morning, haha!

  • @michaelpfaff8280
    @michaelpfaff8280 Před 2 lety +1

    It does work well for small jigs and fixtures where deflection resistance isn't an issue. I recently made a tenoning jig with a melamine base. Slides smoothly across the table saw and is dead-flat.

  • @Amanda_Harper
    @Amanda_Harper Před 2 lety +3

    My workshop floor will be 2 layers of loft board particle board (chipboard here in Ireland) running lengths in opposite directions and then self made end grain cedar parquet on top of that with adhesive between every layer and 100mm of poly-iso insulation under it all.
    It definitely has its uses but you have to work with its strengths. My first 6 months of training was making full custom kitchens from 2.44m x1.22mx11mm sheets of white melamine, the guy teaching me did the countertops and custom fixings. Almost 25 years later almost all of those kitchens are still where we installed them. So yeah work to the materials strengths and it can last a lot longer than you might expect.

    • @LykeArgy
      @LykeArgy Před rokem

      100% idk, about US but where i live in EU the kitchens stands for a long ass time especially if "installed" properly and ofcourse siliconed where necessary

  • @darylbaggins9603
    @darylbaggins9603 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for all that information it was easy to sit through too. Very informed

  • @tonywilliamson1474
    @tonywilliamson1474 Před 2 lety

    Very informative video thank you
    Tony

  • @T_Jonesy
    @T_Jonesy Před 2 lety

    Great video, as always and super informative.

  • @im1dc
    @im1dc Před 2 lety

    Another excellent educational video. Thanks.

  • @michaelbluejay
    @michaelbluejay Před 2 lety

    Perfect explanations, as always.

  • @brucecurrie6913
    @brucecurrie6913 Před rokem

    Very informative. Thanks!

  • @gailherron199
    @gailherron199 Před 2 lety

    I used melamine particle board for shelving supported by a 1x2 for closets and a pantry. Worked great!

  • @ryanpeiris
    @ryanpeiris Před rokem

    Super helpful. Thank you.

  • @BrentAyotte
    @BrentAyotte Před 2 lety

    Great information, thank you!!

  • @ef3371
    @ef3371 Před 2 lety

    Perfect presentation as usual.

  • @gunnargunnarsson3583
    @gunnargunnarsson3583 Před 2 lety

    Great review of both pros and cons.

  • @TheMatrixArchitect
    @TheMatrixArchitect Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for the Informative video.

  • @kuhmpashun
    @kuhmpashun Před 2 lety

    Awesome info. Thanks!

  • @michellepaterson132
    @michellepaterson132 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for all the info. I do have a craft table made from the particle board with melamine. Works great! I have a glowforge and I was tryimng to figure out what are the best woods for different projects. Checking out your other videos.👍

  • @kerrygibbs8198
    @kerrygibbs8198 Před 2 lety +1

    As usual you made a great informative video. I always learn from your videos. Thank You!!

  • @joeviragh8721
    @joeviragh8721 Před 2 lety +1

    I recently talked to a master wood worker whom I purchased some nice white oak veneered particle board. It's his go to for large builds that he mostly gets orders for. Bands it with real white oak strips. It's strong and the straightest boards according to him. He likes the fact it won't warp. Stains beautifully too.

  • @firechick561
    @firechick561 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks! I never really understood the differences in mdf & particle board...OR that particle board is good for crafting surfaces ( if enough support is available). 👍

  • @tim8767
    @tim8767 Před 2 lety

    Very helpful. Thanks!

  • @jameskroeck3178
    @jameskroeck3178 Před 2 lety +1

    Like you mentioned, great for a small craft or sewing table.

  • @andrec7440
    @andrec7440 Před 2 lety

    Good morning and thanks

  • @jamesb5863
    @jamesb5863 Před 2 lety +4

    We actually just used some to fix a sagging couch. It's an old couch and didn't want to spend too much money to fix it. It was over $20 cheaper than plywood and the guy at Lowes gave us 50% off the piece cause we chose the one that had broken edges (that would not affect the pieces we needed) so we actually saved a lot more over plywood. We made it fit over the frame and springs and then wrapped it in the cushioning and cloth, the couch feels like new again.

  • @tomhostetter8516
    @tomhostetter8516 Před 2 lety +2

    I use 2 sheets of Melamine for my assembly table, I edge banded it with hardwood on the bottom piece and let the 2nd piece float inside. It's worked great so far

  • @wittywoo9559
    @wittywoo9559 Před 2 lety +4

    Seen it in a hot press floor where the cylinder leaked.. & the floor gave way.. caused a serious problem with the heavy cylinder

  • @jose_500
    @jose_500 Před 2 lety

    very fair assessment

  • @wolfman75
    @wolfman75 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Ethan for the great info!!!!! 👍😎

  • @ziqianli8057
    @ziqianli8057 Před 2 lety +2

    we use a type of particleboard called yellow tongue in Australia for subflooring

  • @Slaphappy-_-
    @Slaphappy-_- Před 2 lety

    This was great!!! Thanks

  • @chefmichaelt
    @chefmichaelt Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the info.

  • @patrickholt4140
    @patrickholt4140 Před 2 lety +5

    Was asked once by the manager of a cabinet shop I worked at what we could do to improve quality
    I said take all the particle board and set it on fire and use only plywood
    They never asked me anything again

    • @tcbridges
      @tcbridges Před 2 lety +1

      Did the company chage to plywood or stay with making cheap products

    • @patrickholt4140
      @patrickholt4140 Před 2 lety

      @@tcbridges stayed cheap
      No longer in business in my town

  • @jefff6167
    @jefff6167 Před 2 lety

    Good info that I can’t find anywhere else. 👍🇺🇸

  • @destinymoore01
    @destinymoore01 Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks so much for this detailed video! Helped me with the decision to buy plywood cabinets.

  • @jeremynguyen2346
    @jeremynguyen2346 Před 2 lety +2

    Good information video 👍👍👍👍

  • @Dr.CandanEsin
    @Dr.CandanEsin Před 2 lety

    At last. Thank you! This is mostly used in Turkey, and I didn't know its name in English. Very useful info.

  • @conniegreco8409
    @conniegreco8409 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you😊

  • @stewarttrains98
    @stewarttrains98 Před 2 lety

    I built a work table out of melamine and properly supported it. I weigh in at 210 and I sat on it after I built it and it held me without any issues. Going on just over two years and it's still solid as the day it was built.

  • @budgetaudiophilelife-long5461

    🤗👍😎 THANKS ETHAN …for sharing this ONE REDEEMING QUALITY for particle board 😁😍😍😍

  • @MSeroga
    @MSeroga Před 2 lety +2

    I do a lot of mobile home repairs and they use 3/4 particle board as subfloor and then install carpet and sheet vinyl over it. You cant really use osb or something not as smooth to replace it in this case because then you'll have small dips and bumps in the vinyl. But I guess the mdf sheets would be the more expensive replacement but that's usually not in the budget.

  • @lincolndickerson1293
    @lincolndickerson1293 Před 2 lety +2

    There are certain jigs that benefit from the slick durable of Melamine. Surfaces like fences, some work surfaces like router tables provided your shop is in a dry place where the exposure to heavy moisture is low. Also I always use edge banding to help keep the moisture out. That being said I don’t use partical board that isn’t Melamine. In many cases it is pretty much free because people of put bookcases and other furniture on the curb for free (still need to add the edge banding). Lastly it makes great dust containment boxes under router tables and such because it contains noise as well as being a surface dust slides off of.

  • @edcottingham1
    @edcottingham1 Před rokem

    Very fair and measured. Too easy to say, as many do, "Oh, that stuff is c__p." And one important spec often glossed over is $$$, often a major consideration in some homeowner apps.

  • @findlayhunter4934
    @findlayhunter4934 Před 2 lety +1

    Your videos are so awesome!

  • @marthaleone584
    @marthaleone584 Před 2 lety

    Thank you 🙂👏!

  • @carolpeterson7179
    @carolpeterson7179 Před 2 lety +26

    It is the worst !!!! . I live in a double wide and the floors are all going down . I hate it , I hate it ,

    • @danielmaxwell6676
      @danielmaxwell6676 Před 2 lety +2

      I had a moble home in the 1980s, so much particle board ... even for the floors. A bathromm leak could cause the toilet to fall through the floor.

    • @a.elizabethlowe7818
      @a.elizabethlowe7818 Před rokem

      Agreed. It's in the old cabinets in the house I live in and the walls in the shed and as it deteriorates, it smells sooo bad. Especially when the laminate is missing.

    • @Kameron-The-Crafter
      @Kameron-The-Crafter Před 3 měsíci

      Was it really a particle 0:38 board. That's what most cabinets boxes are made from. He's holding some laminated particle board.

  • @jameshuggins4300
    @jameshuggins4300 Před 2 lety +1

    I know I'm late to the party on this video but man does it bring back some old memories! My dD was a professional house painter and carpenter back in the 70s and 80s. He would bring home the sink cutouts and used them to make small end tables and kids craft tables. I bet he sold hundreds of those things and probably didn't have 10 dollars of material in them. We had melamine sink and counter scraps everywhere 🤣🤣!

  • @stephenfennell
    @stephenfennell Před rokem

    That was excellent! You told us that (as even inexperienced woodworkers know), particle board is cheap, prone to bend, prone to soak up water, and doesn't take a screw in the edge, but ALSO has some genuine uses where its dead flat quality, dead smooth, impervious laminate top, and resistance to denting on the surface, makes it actually attractive as a craft table top, where better quality wood cannot easily do the same work.

  • @gizmo7877
    @gizmo7877 Před 2 lety

    This video was so helpful to me because I will soon be needing a countertop in my garage to place over an existing cabinet on casters, to work on. I didn’t know what I should use. I didn’t want anything too heavy but wanted a smooth surface to work on. I need at least six feet in length and at least a foot wide and thought about pine or MDF, but didn’t know about particle board, so thanks for the heads up. 😊

  • @CemKalyoncu
    @CemKalyoncu Před 2 lety +12

    MDF also has melamine option too. In fact my entire home furniture is made out of them. Melamine coating is crazy durable, textured ones can easily grind softwood, can take quite a beating before chipping and resists even the hardest chemicals I can throw at them. However, unless melamine is coated as a single piece, it has very little protection against water as it seeps through edges quite easily.

    • @jimnasium452
      @jimnasium452 Před 2 lety

      How do you coat the edges? And do you mask off the melamine?

    • @CemKalyoncu
      @CemKalyoncu Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@jimnasium452 There are bands which you can apply on with some heat. However, they often leave tiny gaps which is enough to ruin your table/cabinet if water reaches there and stays a while. I think you might have some success by applying band first and coating with sides and edges with thick poly to reduce water transmission.

    • @nasserisback488
      @nasserisback488 Před 2 lety +1

      Laminated MDF has only started catching on in GB the past 5 years. Chip board is still widely used in the manufacturer of bedroom/kitchen/office furniture

    • @nasserisback488
      @nasserisback488 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jimnasium452 edge banding strips come pre clued heat activated or non pre glued. I use it when having g to cut down kitchen cabinets

    • @jimnasium452
      @jimnasium452 Před 2 lety

      @@CemKalyoncu Thanks! I suppose you align that banding slightly below the melamine top so there's nothing to catch when you say, wipe down the work surface?

  • @BobDaniel
    @BobDaniel Před 2 lety +17

    I made a gigantic custom wall unit entirely of oak-veneered particle board, about 25 years ago, when I was younger and dumber. After 3 moves, incredibly, it's still in perfect shape. But I would use veneered plywood if I was doing it again and could get the materials.

  • @stanimir4197
    @stanimir4197 Před 2 lety +1

    I've found epoxy coated zinc wood insert and standard machine screws work pretty well to replace the standard wood screws - also infinite assembly/disassembly Particle boards are relatively easy to repair with putty made of epoxy and sawdust.

  • @juliehenderson1672
    @juliehenderson1672 Před 2 lety +2

    How do you compare melamine to MDF and Particle board? Oops! You answered that too! Thank you!

  • @georgequalls5043
    @georgequalls5043 Před 2 lety

    I think you covered it well.

  • @MyUnquenchableThirst
    @MyUnquenchableThirst Před rokem

    Great video

  • @gacdrums6685
    @gacdrums6685 Před 2 lety

    Hey …. Just wanted to let you know ever since you made the video on your work table I have been looking for a solid door , well today 4/28 I finally found one from a company that was moving, this door was heavy !!! The best thing about it was only 5.00 dollars….. LOL going to start the table project in a couple of days…… thanks again ….. by the way im in greensboro also ……

  • @earlyriser8998
    @earlyriser8998 Před 2 lety +1

    we had particle board subfloor in a remodel we did. Moisture had gotten to some of it turning it into powder. The remainder was easy to remove after cutting and a pry bar. Two rooms had plywood subfloor and they were nearly impossible to remove without cutting into 6 inch squares and a lot of pry bar effort. However, the restored original red pine floors are gorgeous. Worth the effort. But if putting in a new subfloor it would be plywood not particle board.

  • @soyythomas
    @soyythomas Před 2 lety

    You are literally my teacher. Thanks😇

  • @bigkidforever6388
    @bigkidforever6388 Před rokem

    I am ripping it out of my bathroom. A gap in the laminate flooring has had the water get into the particle board. I am replacing with 1/2 inch plywood and ripping out the whirlpool tub. I have been running fans and heaters to dry out the particle board to make it easier to remove.

  • @muraliparameswaran4182

    Thanks sir

  • @arcatacompany
    @arcatacompany Před 2 lety

    Thanks

  • @garethcollins8201
    @garethcollins8201 Před 2 lety +4

    If you know how to make particle board cabinets, then they can last 50-60 years as in most 1950's and 1960's kitchens that are still around. Particle board can be used outdoors if sealed correctly or as I have personally seen, submerged in a pool for 10yrs (correctly sealed). I didn't believe it, but it was removed and cut in half in front of me to prove it.

  • @wags99999
    @wags99999 Před 2 lety +4

    I take it you are aware there a number of different grades of particle board. Choosing the correct one is imperative. It is a better choice in many cases. Laminate countertops are made almost exclusively using a PB core, but not the PB you find at the box stores. The melamine PB has the wear of a standard laminate, just not the impact resistance. YOu can also get PB with different adhesives for different applications. Not all particle boards are the same, it's difficult to say it's not a good product because the junk you see at the Box Stores, (typically imported PB) is just that, junk. It gets a bad name more from lack of knowledge of what kinds of PB is in the market place and using the wrong product.

  • @36736fps
    @36736fps Před 2 lety

    I still have three bare thirty-year-old 7' high by 4' wide particle board shelf units that have survived 2 cross town moves and a damp basement floor. They look lousy but work fine in the shop.

  • @propertystuff7221
    @propertystuff7221 Před 2 lety +2

    This video is perhaps the biggest proof that this carpenter really IS honest. Most any other would have an extremely one-sided opinion and not mention anything about the other side of the coin.

    • @TheHonestCarpenter
      @TheHonestCarpenter  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks, Property! 😄

    • @propertystuff7221
      @propertystuff7221 Před 2 lety

      @@TheHonestCarpenter (Especially in light of the "THE IKEA EFFECT" video, musta been hard to say anything good at all about particle board.) ;)

    • @stanimir4197
      @stanimir4197 Před 2 lety

      @@propertystuff7221 Actually the bulk of Ikea fame is their "honeycomb structure paper filling" - light and very sturdy for its weight.

  • @GUCR44
    @GUCR44 Před 2 lety +1

    I only use this when I have something that is sacrificial and requires no strength whatsoever.. I really dislike this product.. Great vid thank you for all you do. Peace Rolf

  • @davidhull2060
    @davidhull2060 Před 2 měsíci

    In the U.K., chipboard is the go-to material for flooring. We generally use 8x2 tongue and groove boards 18 or 22mm thick...the board is higher density than a standard particle board and treated for moisture resistance. Installation is by glueing the tongues to prevent squeaks and ring shank nails or screws to hold them down....carpet, vinyl or laminate goes straight on the top.

  • @caramidacaramida3959
    @caramidacaramida3959 Před 2 lety +1

    Well I made small bed side cabinets for me howse with it and mrdiu tool cabimets, for the tool cabinet I used alunium l shaped trim it protects the edge well I hasn't given up after aboud 2 year of use I like I can use scraps

  • @johnmorris3972
    @johnmorris3972 Před 8 měsíci

    I'm using Melamine for a bench fence because of the clean face, and straight edge. I initially tried using screws to hold it together, and it was a disaster. I am now using dowels with a much better result.
    Cutting is, shall we say 'challenging'. I recommend scoring the top couple of millimetres, then doing the complete cut. Some cut edges will be exposed on the finished product, so I have purchased iron-on tape to deal with that.
    As the item is not overly large, I still feel it was the right choice, but if MDF, with a plastic coating was available, where I live, I would have gone for that.

  • @grimeybeast1465
    @grimeybeast1465 Před rokem

    I lucked into a 2.5" thick 30"x5' particleboard desktop with maple laminate on the top, bottom, and edges. I turned it into a workbench top, and have zero regrets. It's tough as hell, and it's seen a lot of "abuse" over the years. It's also VERY flat. I had to dial in the maple top with an orbital sander and a straight edge to get it flat, but, it has stayed flat since.

  • @cattigereyes1
    @cattigereyes1 Před 2 lety +2

    I would never use OSB on the out side of a house! It soaks up water! I would use ply wood.

  • @tinnaz1
    @tinnaz1 Před 2 lety +3

    Sawdust is great for compost and compost toilets. Not much good for anything else.

  • @lafamillecarrington
    @lafamillecarrington Před 9 měsíci

    'Frangible' - great word that you don't hear too often!

  • @ccbowers
    @ccbowers Před 2 lety +5

    "We see particle board... especially in cabinet type furniture. Companies like Ikea seem to use little else in their manufacturing." Ikea uses MDF for their cabinets, not particle board. Their inexpensive furniture is usually particle board, but as a company they use a lot of both

    • @stanimir4197
      @stanimir4197 Před 2 lety +2

      The absolutely use particle boards, and mdf, and honey comb paper fill. Just an example: Kalax (likely their most popular shelving unit) --- Materials & care: Particleboard, Fibreboard, Acrylic paint, Honeycomb structure paper filling (100% recycled), Plastic edging

    • @soulmatic09
      @soulmatic09 Před 2 lety

      They probably use MDF on many of their kitchen cabinet fronts, but a ton of their bathroom storage cabinets are particleboard

    • @ccbowers
      @ccbowers Před 2 lety

      @@soulmatic09 Yes. That appears to be an accurate generalization. I was thinking kitchen cabinets with MDF, but Ikea makes a lot of particle board furniture. They are usually priced accordingly.

  • @AxGryndr
    @AxGryndr Před 2 lety +1

    It makes for a great sacrificial surface for a CNC router.

  • @rtmkayuminimalis1522
    @rtmkayuminimalis1522 Před rokem

    Bahan nya bagus

  • @PaulBrennan.
    @PaulBrennan. Před rokem

    What is your view on ikea particleboard veneered kitchen worktops?