RogerM
Nordic Pine
I’ve just been laminating up some ash strips to make an apron for my sunburst table, and I read around a bit to see how much you have to allow for spring back, never having done this before, and came across an interesting formula.

The expected springback is :-
Spring back = x divided by the number of laminations (squared).
The distance “x” is the amplitude of the bend, and not necessarily the radius - unless you are laminating up a semicircle. In my case the distance “x” was 35cms. I started with 6 laminations of 4mm ash to get an apron 24mm thick, so the expected spring back was 35/36 = 1cm as near as dammit. I used cascamite for the laminations …

...and the resulting spring back was 11mm.

If I use 8 laminations of 3mm to get the same 24mm apron, the resulting springback should be 35/64 = 5.5mm. This is what I got :-


Seems to work pretty well. This should make it easy to build an allowance in to the bending former so that you end up with the curvature you want after spring back. Hope this might be of use.

The expected springback is :-
Spring back = x divided by the number of laminations (squared).
The distance “x” is the amplitude of the bend, and not necessarily the radius - unless you are laminating up a semicircle. In my case the distance “x” was 35cms. I started with 6 laminations of 4mm ash to get an apron 24mm thick, so the expected spring back was 35/36 = 1cm as near as dammit. I used cascamite for the laminations …

...and the resulting spring back was 11mm.

If I use 8 laminations of 3mm to get the same 24mm apron, the resulting springback should be 35/64 = 5.5mm. This is what I got :-


Seems to work pretty well. This should make it easy to build an allowance in to the bending former so that you end up with the curvature you want after spring back. Hope this might be of use.