


Ich habe mich gerade an einem neuen Ort eingelebt, an dem meine Frau und ich endlich einen privaten Hobbyraum genießen können. Deshalb wollte ich daran arbeiten, einen DIY-Brettspieltisch zu bauen (der Kauf von Fertigteilen ist einfach wahnsinnig teuer). Ich recherchiere immer noch, welches Holz ich verwenden müsste, um zu verhindern, dass der Tisch durch Bewegung (Ausdehnung usw.) bricht, aber ich frage mich, wo ich am besten relativ große/große Holztische/Teller kaufen könnte.
Ich habe vor, die Füße eines vorhandenen Tisches zu recyceln und nur die Platte zu bauen. Ich bräuchte eine 180×100/110-Basis und dann genug Reste, um den erhöhten Rand und die „Deckel-/Abdeckplatten“ zu erstellen.
Es gibt ein paar Bilder, um eine Vorstellung davon zu geben, was ich vorhabe.
Eine Hilfe wäre sehr dankbar!
https://www.reddit.com/gallery/1s8hi58
Von Rohkha
5 Kommentare
Leyendecker
There was a fablab in Luxembourg but it don’t exists anymore to my knowledge.
There was another post from 10y ago on the subject, you may find some infos there: [https://www.reddit.com/r/Luxembourg/comments/53mcrf/where_to_your_diy_wood_work_projects_in_luxembourg/](https://www.reddit.com/r/Luxembourg/comments/53mcrf/where_to_your_diy_wood_work_projects_in_luxembourg/)
Invite me for some BG sesssions once its done!
When in need of a DM you can contact me.
As a hobby woodworker with a few small and large projects under my belt, i will tell you that you will probably pay more while doing it yourself, thant if you bought it straight away.
If you want this to be a journey, so be it. Just mind you that it will become expensive, even if you manage to borrow all of the tools.
For the table: either go with sheet goods (veneered) or build the panels yourself.
Just check the hardwarestore. Bauhaus has a lot of aestetically pleasing sheet goods.
If you want to make the panels yourself, just go out and buy the pine stuff they sell and stain it.
Buy the wood and keep it a week or two in the room you want to put the table later on. Any piece that cups or warps or does other similarly silly stuff: not good for this project. (If you don‘t want to open the pandora‘s box of milling your wood)
Don‘t go for live edge stuff (tgat you will find in bauhaus), you will have a bad time, if you don‘t know what you‘re doing. They look nice but are a bitch to work with.
For the feet: they will be expensive. Don‘t buy the seemingly straight wood from the aisles. They will bend and curve.
Look at actual feet. Milled, dried (not finished)
They have some options in bauhaus too iirc.
Have fun;)