PVA glues are water soluble and over time in humid environments or with continued exposure to water the joint may eventually fail. I have seen Cutting boards that people have wet washed repeatedly come apart at the seams. Those usually have mostly side grain joints but often have edging that is glued end-grain to side-grain.Majones1 wrote: Sun Sep 05, 2021 12:00 pm Being new to woodworking, I’m curious to know how and if time would affect his joint tests. Would the movement of wood (expansion/contraction) affect the glue bonding over the years? I would expect there might be some impact on the end-to-end joint since there is more movement there. Or do you think that would be negligible?
As for movement due to temperature and humidity changes, I don't think there is substantially more movement of the wood over time in the end grain at the joint as opposed to side grain. A board expands and contracts substantially more along along its length than side to side because boards are usually much longer than wide. A small square cut piece like one used in the video would not have a noticeable change in size in any direction. You'll find numerous chess boards that are very old and still very tight even if they have been made with alternating grain orientations.
Of course anything not well glued in the first place could have problems no matter what grain orientation is used or what the conditions are. I'll bet most failures are due to things like gaps between the mating surfaces, too much or too little glue, lack of sufficient clamping or drying time, dirty mating surfaces, and other issues besides the grain orientation.