33 replies so far
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#1 posted 496 days ago |
I usually buy hardboard at Lowe’s. In my local store the have the hardboard in the panelling section, instead of plywood/lumber. -- The more I work with wood the more I recognize only God can make something as beautiful as a tree. I hope my humble attempts at this craft do justice by His masterpiece. -- Tim |
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#2 posted 496 days ago |
Tempered hardboard is as common as 2×4s around here. Both Lowes and Home Depot carry it… On the shelf below the peg board which is just hardboard with a mess of holes in it… It’s usually by the lattice boards and stuff, not with the plywood… -- Manufacturer of fine quality sawdust since 1984. Comments and advice on my shop welcome. Check it out at http://lumberjocks.com/dbhost/workshop. Gladly accepting shop build donations! |
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#3 posted 496 days ago |
bLowes. Try again. Go in person, if you call and ask, you might have been asking someone who wouldn’t know hardwood from from hardboard from softwood. They might call it masonite, try that. It may be near the paneling, rather than the plywood. It comes tempered, which gives it a darker color and a little more strength, I think the tempered is smooth both sides, the regular is meshed, sort of looks like screen, on one side. There is also a melamine variety at our Lowes, white, sorta painted on one side. I almost never touch the stuff, but it just so happens today I cut some, for a sacrificial table top. (No, I am not going to sacrifice any virgins….) good luck with it. -- Dan V. in Indy |
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#4 posted 496 days ago |
Hard board = tempered board = masonite maybe they just call it something different. I’ve seen it in smaller sheets down low around these parts. -- Pine is fine, but Oak's no joke! |
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#5 posted 496 days ago |
OH CRUD, I never thought it would be in the paneling section. Been in the plywood area looking. I’ll give that a try. THANKS! -- Ken, USAF MSgt, Ret. |
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#6 posted 496 days ago |
Ken they usually have it in the molding and trim section at Lowe’s. -- Challenges are what make life interesting; overcoming them is what makes life meaningful- Joshua Marine |
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#7 posted 495 days ago |
I Always purchase mine at Lowes or HD |
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#8 posted 495 days ago |
Newbie question – I’ve never worked with hardboard. What are some good uses for it? |
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#9 posted 495 days ago |
Elizabeth: I use it for making router templates, and for parts of jigs occasionally. -- Charlie M. "Woodworking - patience = firewood" |
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#10 posted 495 days ago |
HD and Lowes carry both 3/16” and 1/8” tempered hardboard and both keep in paneling section. Wish I could find some 1/4” like they used to sell. Have a couple of work tables built with sacrificial 1/4” tempered hardboard tops and wood banding around outside. When I have to replace with the 3/16” material I will have to remove and reinstall the edge banding 1/16” lower or it will be proud of the surface. Hope they are saving a lot of cost with this thickness reduction. -- Rick Gustafson - Lost Creek Ranch - Colorado County, Texas |
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#11 posted 495 days ago |
Viking, Just replace the 1/4” with 3/16” hardboard, make a jig/fence, run a router horizontally with a bearing guided flush cutting bit (template bit). There’s no need to remove the edge banding. -- Randy-- I may not be good...but I am slow! |
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#12 posted 495 days ago |
Viking I have a table with sacrificial melamine on the top. You can turn it over when it gets rough and go twice as long. My old eyes like the white because it is easy to find things on the surface. You can get it in 1/4 I think. |
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#13 posted 495 days ago |
Randy / Grandpa; Both great ideas. Thanks! -- Rick Gustafson - Lost Creek Ranch - Colorado County, Texas |
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#14 posted 494 days ago |
Viking, Wow! Usually, when I have a good idea, it just dies from loneliness -- Randy-- I may not be good...but I am slow! |
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#15 posted 494 days ago |
Your welcome from here also. I am with DIY on this….LOL Wish you the best on your endeavor |
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#16 posted 494 days ago |
Elizabeth. I use a lot of tempered hardboard, mostly for shop fixtures. Mostly jigs and table tops. I use it mainly for fence and table faces where things have to slide across it. It is somewhat slick, and doesn’t tend to chip out as much as melamine. -- Manufacturer of fine quality sawdust since 1984. Comments and advice on my shop welcome. Check it out at http://lumberjocks.com/dbhost/workshop. Gladly accepting shop build donations! |
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#17 posted 494 days ago |
If you really need the full 1/4” THB , it is available. Call your local lumber yard , not Lowes or HoDepo. -- When did quiet and quite become the same word ? I'm guessing about the same time as your and you're did. |
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#18 posted 494 days ago |
Elizabeth, If hardboard gets damp it needs to be dried flat or it will set in all kinds of interesting shapes. This fellow uses that property to make warplane replicas for museums. -Jack |
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#19 posted 494 days ago |
I just remembered what else I dislike about the change from 1/4” to 3/16” hardboard. I use the HB for drawer bottoms in “shop furniture”. I used to cut the bottom panel grooves in drawers with a 1/4” straight router bit in my router table but, have to take a couple of passes over table saw blade now. Anyone seen a 3/16” straight router bit out there? Thanks. -- Rick Gustafson - Lost Creek Ranch - Colorado County, Texas |
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#20 posted 494 days ago |
try a local cabinet shop. give em a call first. some will sell to you, (if you run your own business), which you do, don’t you?? isn’t it called Kens Kupboards, or something like that??? you know what I mean? -- Roger from KY. Work/Play/Travel Safe. Kentuk55@bellsouth.net |
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#21 posted 494 days ago |
3/16” router bits...I just bought one from WoodCraft to match some inlay that I bought from them. -- When did quiet and quite become the same word ? I'm guessing about the same time as your and you're did. |
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#22 posted 494 days ago |
Yes! Just ask for Masonite... they will know. -- Have Fun! Joe Lyddon - Alta Loma, CA USA - Home: http://www.WoodworkStuff.net ... My Small Gallery: http://www.ncwoodworker.net/pp/showgallery.php?ppuser=1389&cat=500" |
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#23 posted 493 days ago |
Thanks for the info Dusty 56. Will stop by there tomorrow. -- Rick Gustafson - Lost Creek Ranch - Colorado County, Texas |
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#24 posted 493 days ago |
Hi Viking , I opted for the Freud solid carbide , but they also had the WoodRiver brand for a couple dollars less. -- When did quiet and quite become the same word ? I'm guessing about the same time as your and you're did. |
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#25 posted 493 days ago |
Dusty; At the risk of seeming to hijack this thread, I have also had good luck with several WR router bits in my collection. On line, I noticed that they also have 7/32” straight bits as well. May get both so I can make one pass on drawer bottom grooves to fit the 3/16” HB. I am on major project to get my shop organized and have many drawers to build. The HB makes good drawer bottoms, in my opinion. Thanks -- Rick Gustafson - Lost Creek Ranch - Colorado County, Texas |
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#26 posted 493 days ago |
I wouldn’t consider this as hijacking this thread. The OP received proper and numerous answers to his question, and adding a source for a tool for the undersized hardboard shouldn’t be a problem. More info can’t hurt : ) -- When did quiet and quite become the same word ? I'm guessing about the same time as your and you're did. |
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#27 posted 493 days ago |
I think a fellow LJ has what yoru lookin for … hardboard right … http://lumberjocks.com/topics/34698 -- "there aren’t many hand tools as awe-inspiring as the #8 jointer. I mean, it just reeks of cast iron heft and hubris" - Smitty |
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#28 posted 493 days ago |
R O F A L M A O !! -- Have Fun! Joe Lyddon - Alta Loma, CA USA - Home: http://www.WoodworkStuff.net ... My Small Gallery: http://www.ncwoodworker.net/pp/showgallery.php?ppuser=1389&cat=500" |
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#29 posted 493 days ago |
chrisstef LMAO !! -- When did quiet and quite become the same word ? I'm guessing about the same time as your and you're did. |
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#30 posted 492 days ago |
lol man i was going back n forth about posting that one but i honestly couldnt resist ... my sense of humor hasnt really evolved much than that from a construction site. -- "there aren’t many hand tools as awe-inspiring as the #8 jointer. I mean, it just reeks of cast iron heft and hubris" - Smitty |
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#31 posted 492 days ago |
I believe that technically what is being talked about as 3/16” hardboard is most likely 5mm hardboard. -- "Hard work is not defined by the difficulty of the task as much as a person's desire to perform it.", DS251 |
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#32 posted 492 days ago |
So, DS251 …...... I went to Woodcraft today and bought a 3/16” router bit. You now tell me I should have bought a 5mm bit? I am not sure plywood, hardboard, etc. have gone metric or cheap? -- Rick Gustafson - Lost Creek Ranch - Colorado County, Texas |
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#33 posted 491 days ago |
Hardboard is the generic term for high density fiberboard. |



























