I was looking on Youtube at some 3D cutting boards. They start out by gluing up strips of wood side by side - the normal long grain to long grain and that is all well and good. Then they cut the whole thing up completely across the grain at lets say 45* in some cases. Then they rearrange the newly cut pieces and re-glue these sections together with the more or less end grain to end grain (the 45* cuts).
When they are done, the new cutting board along the length is just a bunch of sections of end grain to end grain.
In other cases, they add decorative steep angled curves in their design, ending up with pretty much end grain ant 90* to thin decorative strips on the long grain sections.
I dont have the ambition or time right now to make one or 2 like that just to test it to destruction.
Is Tight-bond now that good at end grain to end grain gluing?
When they are done, the new cutting board along the length is just a bunch of sections of end grain to end grain.
In other cases, they add decorative steep angled curves in their design, ending up with pretty much end grain ant 90* to thin decorative strips on the long grain sections.
I dont have the ambition or time right now to make one or 2 like that just to test it to destruction.
Is Tight-bond now that good at end grain to end grain gluing?