View Full Version : MDF vs Plywood and wood vs metal Router table


bevins
01-07-2007, 10:40 AM
Why is many people using MDF instead of plywood? I would think because of the inherent problems with moisture with MDF that plywood would be better to use than MDF. 9 ply 3/4, 5/8 or 1" plywood seems to me would be sufficiant and plenty strong enough.

Can someone shed some lite on this? I have been researching and lurking here trying to figure out which router table I want to build. I have the funds and ability to constuct in aluminum, minus a mill, but wonder if it is a good idea to start with an metal build.

I will use the machine to build electric guitars, engraving, tube amp parts, and need the ability to machine small aluminum/metal parts. I have purchased a few plans, and I am still wondering which way I should go. I have been really close to diving in with data-cuts metal table or joes mdf/plywood table.

Can someone sum up the pro's and cons to metal vs mdf/plywood?

Thanks in advance, and this is a great place.

Bob

thkoutsidthebox
01-07-2007, 11:47 AM
AFIK:

Metal gives a more ridgid finished table.
Metal is more expensive.
Metal requires different tools to work that not everyone has available.

If you have the equipment, then working metal, or working wood, its all the same. A 3x6 inch square is the same square whatever its made of. But some people only have the equipment/budget/experience to build from wood. Im building from wood because I dont have the tools or budget right now to build from metal. Next table will be from metal. If you can go with metal, I would.

ger21
01-07-2007, 12:00 PM
For most people, wood is cheaper and easier to work with than metal.

As for MDF vs plywood, MDF is much more stable. Unless you use good quality baltic birch ply, most plywood sold today will warp severely if not cut and assembled within a day or 2 of being puchased, provided you can find flat plywood to start with. If you seal and paint your MDF, you really shouldn't have any moisture problems.

drmosh
01-08-2007, 12:20 AM
ok so a few points...

for the sake of these comments i'm going to assume you would use 11 or 13 ply birch plywood, not the cheaper grade stuff.

plywood and mdf are both going to react with their atmosphere - humidity to be exact. BOTH must be sealed to be stable. plywood will warp/bow and mdf will flare at the edges.

plywood is much much MUCH stronger (tensile and compressive) than mdf. there is a reason no boats are made of mdf (and it's not because mdf isn't waterproof). however, mdf is more rigid. there are some things that could also benefit from plywood providing better dampening and strength.

a popular sealing method for plywood is very low viscosity epoxies - a few coats of this stuff and your plywood is crazy strong. you can do the same on mdf but you have to be very careful not to overapply and saturate the material. mdf is much more porous than plywood. my opinion is that it's better to seal mdf with a barrier coat (like a paint or primer) than a penetrating sealer (like diluted epoxy).

mdf is an engineered material that is effectively flat on it's surfaces. plywood is not flat, even the very best stuff. also, mdf machines very nicely and uniformly.

plywood weighs approx. 25% less than an equivalant amount of mdf. heavier does not always mean better/stronger...

at the end of the day, plywood is a really amazing product that outperforms many other materials on a pound-for-pound basis. however you have to buy the good stuff and that gets expensive, and it's harder to find. also, you loose the close tolerances that you get with mdf. you could make a router completely with mdf, but it would be tough to make the same router with the same tolerances using plywood. HOWEVER - you could make a stronger and lighter router using a mix of both!

Madclicker
01-08-2007, 01:17 AM
ok so a few points...
for the sake of these comments i'm going to assume you would use 11 or 13 ply birch plywood, not the cheaper grade stuff.

When you are talking about the suitibility of plywood for use as tooling it doesn't matter how many plys, or what the surface is finished in...birch, oak, maple makes no difference. What matters in the stability of the ply is whether the inner plys are consistant. Like Ger said, baltic birch is the best plywood you can buy. In my experience it move much more than MDF, but it's the best ply I can get.

[QUOTE=drmosh;239505]plywood and mdf are both going to react with their atmosphere - humidity to be exact. BOTH must be sealed to be stable. plywood will warp/bow and mdf will flare at the edges.

I have no flaring of MDF and I live in as humid a place as there is. Plywood, on the other hand, is a royal pain. Again, like Ger said, you are lucky to get flat ply off the rack, and if you do you better use it quickly.


plywood is much much MUCH stronger (tensile and compressive) than mdf. there is a reason no boats are made of mdf (and it's not because mdf isn't waterproof). however, mdf is more rigid. there are some things that could also benefit from plywood providing better dampening and strength.

I'm not a materials engineer, but I think ply is whimpy compared to MDF. You'll never get me in a boat made of MDF!!!!!

a popular sealing method for plywood is very low viscosity epoxies - a few coats of this stuff and your plywood is crazy strong. you can do the same on mdf but you have to be very careful not to overapply and saturate the material. mdf is much more porous than plywood. my opinion is that it's better to seal mdf with a barrier coat (like a paint or primer) than a penetrating sealer (like diluted epoxy).

My choise of sealer for MDF is phenolic laminate.

mdf is an engineered material that is effectively flat on it's surfaces. plywood is not flat, even the very best stuff. also, mdf machines very nicely and uniformly.

I agree

plywood weighs approx. 25% less than an equivalant amount of mdf. heavier does not always mean better/stronger...

Sometimes it does.

at the end of the day, plywood is a really amazing product that outperforms many other materials on a pound-for-pound basis. however you have to buy the good stuff and that gets expensive, and it's harder to find. also, you loose the close tolerances that you get with mdf. you could make a router completely with mdf, but it would be tough to make the same router with the same tolerances using plywood. HOWEVER - you could make a stronger and lighter router using a mix of both!

I work with both every day...literally. MDF is flat and stable. Plywood sucks to work with, but it's the only way to make attractive wood cabinets. For tools, give me MDF everyday.

Be careful who you explain the shortcomings of plywood to! Some guys wanna start crying!

dertsap
01-08-2007, 02:01 AM
You'll never get me in a boat made of MDF!!!!!

!

if the fish are biting i'd be out there in a minute ,just don t expect me to have the strength to pull that swelled up sponge back up onto shore :D

cut more
01-09-2007, 06:19 AM
Madclicker,
Could you tell me what phenolic laminate is? I need to seal the mdf on my router and have been trying to find out what works.
Thnx

ger21
01-09-2007, 06:59 AM
Madclicker,
Could you tell me what phenolic laminate is? I need to seal the mdf on my router and have been trying to find out what works.
Thnx


Formica

CurtisU
01-09-2007, 10:05 AM
I agree with drmosh, if it's gotta be ply or mdf, a mix of the two would be best... if you can get the good stuff.

My Joe's ish project is all mdf, heavy as a heavy thing, and taking a very long time to build. I had a guitar project going at the same time.

If you need to get up and running fast you should consider buying a metal one off the shelf. If you must build and can, I'd push you toward metal, only because it's likely to be more robust. Better to be building guitars rather than repairing your tools.

If it's gotta be "wood" consider a kit, precisely cut parts for torsion box type construction are tough to do by hand.

If I'd have had a supply of baltic birch (BB) ply I would've used it in the majority of the gantry and Z for weight savings. My hope is to find a supply of BB ply and use my completed router to redo those parts. I prefer the look of ply and a coat or two varnish is all that's needed to seal it, my mdf gets a coat of primer and two of paint.

Curtis

Madclicker
01-10-2007, 12:25 AM
Formica

Yep, that's a brand name. Beats the crap out of paint.

bigz1
01-10-2007, 06:41 PM
Yep if you cant afford steel go for MDF for all the reasons outlined and if your concerned about moisture, buy moisture resistant MDF(usually identifiy by the green coloured core).

As for sealing MDF if its formica faced edging tape looks good otherwise use high build water based MDF primer(can be spayed or brushed dries quickly and is extremely easy to sand and fills the pores in 1 coat). Available to the UK from Screwfix in small quanties for approx £20.

Coogrrr
01-10-2007, 08:11 PM
I would think that if you buy a sheet of 1/2 mdf sandwitch it between 2 1/2inch ply (almost anything) completely coat surfaces with glue lay on garage floor and set several buckets of rocks to hold them together. When dry cut board and put 1.75inc screws thru boards in both directions.

wouldnt you end up with a cheaper (thinner parts and cheaper products) yet stong as all hell solution compared to all the BB or laminating the hell out of mdf?

last stupid thought was after enough BB or mdf and lamination could you just buy some steel and pay to have it welded for cheaper?

I am going all steel and aluminum and am looking to build for .0001 tolerance based off of Solsylva.com plans large belt table.

insert shameless plug here...
http://www.cnczone.com/forums/showthread.php?t=29877
end shameless plug...

(nuts)

ger21
01-10-2007, 08:32 PM
I would think that if you buy a sheet of 1/2 mdf sandwitch it between 2 1/2inch ply (almost anything) completely coat surfaces with glue lay on garage floor and set several buckets of rocks to hold them together. When dry cut board and put 1.75inc screws thru boards in both directions.

wouldnt you end up with a cheaper (thinner parts and cheaper products) yet stong as all hell solution compared to all the BB or laminating the hell out of mdf?



Buckets of rocks don't really provide enough clamping force to do that job properly. You need clamps, lots of them, or a vacuum press.


last stupid thought was after enough BB or mdf and lamination could you just buy some steel and pay to have it welded for cheaper?


Where's the fun in that?? :)

Coogrrr
01-18-2007, 02:06 PM
Buckets of rocks don't really provide enough clamping force to do that job properly. You need clamps, lots of them, or a vacuum press.



Where's the fun in that?? :)


I dunno :) just thought maybe it would be kwik and cheeep. Anywho I am interested if there is a way to slap 2 or three sheets of something with glue and screw together that would make a non-warping piece, I ask as I may do something like this on a smaller second table.

randyf1965
01-25-2007, 08:34 PM
Use your router to cut a torsion box for a new table...... the interlocking torsion frame work cut from 1/4" mdf (or plywood) with a 1/4" skin on both sides (wouldn't be a torsion box without.....) is very easy and extremely strong (glued and nailed)