DIY Red Oak Tabletop for Sit Stand Desk

by Yasthil Bhagwandeen in Workshop > Woodworking

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DIY Red Oak Tabletop for Sit Stand Desk

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In this post I share how I built a 27" x 84" (7ft) tabletop using Red Oak for a friend of mine.

During the pandemic, working-from-home became the way of life for many, including myself. To avoid sitting for extended hours, I purchased a motorized sit/stand desk. This excluded the tabletop and was cheaper than the all-in-one tables. When looking for a tabletop, I didn't like the options I saw online as the price vs quality didn't make sense.

Naturally, I Googled "How to build a tabletop" and that's how my woodworking journey begun!

I built my first tabletop using SPF (Spruce/Pine/Fir) i.e. softwood.


I offered to build a similar tabletop for my friend, but this time, I used Red Oak (hardwood).


Supplies

Materials:

- S4S boards of Red oak

- Titebond 2

- Watco Danish Oil - Dark Walnut

- Minwax Wipe-on Polyurethane

- Minwax Finishing Wax Paste

- Scott shop towels


Tools:

- 3/4" pipe clamps

- Mitre saw (to trim off the ends)

- Track saw (to clean up the edges for a seamless glue-up)

- Random orbital sander

Design

- Dimensions: 27" x 84" and a final thickness of ~1"

- Wood: Red Oak - I chose this for its value and strength

Purchase the Lumber

My friend and I visited our local hardwood supplier and selected our boards.

Seeing that I don't have a planer, jointer or table saw, we asked the supplier to mill the boards down to 6 * 4.5" x 7ft boards (S4S).

This meant that all 4 sides will be surfaced and true.

Dry Fit

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Once the boards were ready I did a dry fit and they were all flat and straight.

Jointing the Edges

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In the absence of a jointer/table saw, I used my track saw to joint the edges.

I clamped some scrap 2x4s on top and below two boards which helped them stay together. You don't want to clamp these boards together since this will cause the boards to bind and potentially cause kick-back.

Glue-up

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Using 3/4" pipe clamps, I applied a liberal amount of Titebond 2 and clamped them together.

Unfortunately, I did the glue-up 4-5 weeks after I got the boards from the supplier and some boards had developed a bow.

I tried my best to clamp the boards straight using clamping cauls, however, it wasn't a perfect glue-up.

All I could do was wait for the glue to dry and try and sand the table flat.


Sanding

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After scraping off the glue, I started standing.

I used the following grits:

- 4 passes of 80 grit (I had to remove a fair amount of material as it wasn't a perfect glue-up)

- 4 passes of 120 grit

- 2 passes of 220 grit

- Sprayed on water (raised the grain) and did another pass of 220 grit

Trimming and Routing

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I trimmed the edges to final length using my track saw and routed the edges using a 1/4" round-over bit

Finishing

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3 coats of Danish Oil (Dark Walnut)

  • Wiping off excess between coats
  • After the last coat, I left it to dry for 72 hours
  • 3 coats of wipe-on poly

Finally, I used finishing paste wax

Installation

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Installed on a dual motor sit-stand desk.


Shared on my personal blog: https://yasthil.com/diy/2022/10/23/red-oak-tabletop/