VH

Vince Heuring

29/08/2007 5:42 PM

What I learned about Zebrawood this week

Besides learning all about how spiral upcut bits can climb out of
router collets.

Zebrawood is *expensive*.

Zebrawood must be the worst wood in the world to surface -- tearout is
the terrible. The alternating grain makes it impossible to surface with
a planer or hand planes, save maybe for a scraper plane, which I do not
have. I believe the white and brown stripes are alternating sapwood and
heartwood. However it can be surfaced quite easily, relatively
speaking, using a hand scraper, with which I now have much experience.

Cutting cross grain on the table saw also leads to unacceptable tearout
unless you provide sacrificial backing boards on the bottom and back,
at least in my experience.

It glues up with no problems using TB3. I worried about how well it
would take screws, but when I predrilled carefully I had no problems.

After finishing with five coats of Minwax Wipe-on Poly it looks
fantastic, giving the appearance of sedimentary rock such as sandstone.

Here are some shots of the tabletop alone, and attached to a small
table with tapered black walnut legs and curly maple aprons.

http://web.mac.com/heuring/Site/Photos.html

--
Vince Heuring To email, remove the Vince.


This topic has 5 replies

TB

"Tom Bunetta"

in reply to Vince Heuring on 29/08/2007 5:42 PM

30/08/2007 1:03 PM


"Joe" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
<snip>
>> --
>> If you're going to be dumb, you better be tough
>
> I miss O'deens posts.
>
> jc
>
>

I bet many of us do!
Tom

MJ

Mark & Juanita

in reply to Vince Heuring on 29/08/2007 5:42 PM

29/08/2007 9:15 PM

Vince Heuring wrote:

> Besides learning all about how spiral upcut bits can climb out of
> router collets.
>
> Zebrawood is *expensive*.
>
> Zebrawood must be the worst wood in the world to surface -- tearout is
> the terrible. The alternating grain makes it impossible to surface with
> a planer or hand planes, save maybe for a scraper plane, which I do not
> have. I believe the white and brown stripes are alternating sapwood and
> heartwood. However it can be surfaced quite easily, relatively
> speaking, using a hand scraper, with which I now have much experience.

Do a google news search for zebrawood and Patrick Olguin (or try O'deen or
Odeen) -- he had similar experience. His account is quite humorous to
read.

--
If you're going to be dumb, you better be tough

VH

Vince Heuring

in reply to Vince Heuring on 29/08/2007 5:42 PM

29/08/2007 9:06 PM


Steal away. Zebrawood is an experience.


In article <[email protected]>, Doug
Miller <[email protected]> wrote:

> In article <290820071742433053%[email protected]>,
> [email protected] wrote:
>
> >After finishing with five coats of Minwax Wipe-on Poly it looks
> >fantastic, giving the appearance of sedimentary rock such as sandstone.
>
> Yes, it does. Nice work. Very nice. I might steal that idea some time.
> >
> >Here are some shots of the tabletop alone, and attached to a small
> >table with tapered black walnut legs and curly maple aprons.
> >
> >http://web.mac.com/heuring/Site/Photos.html
> >

--
Vince Heuring To email, remove the Vince.

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to Vince Heuring on 29/08/2007 5:42 PM

30/08/2007 12:00 AM

In article <290820071742433053%[email protected]>, [email protected] wrote:

>After finishing with five coats of Minwax Wipe-on Poly it looks
>fantastic, giving the appearance of sedimentary rock such as sandstone.

Yes, it does. Nice work. Very nice. I might steal that idea some time.
>
>Here are some shots of the tabletop alone, and attached to a small
>table with tapered black walnut legs and curly maple aprons.
>
>http://web.mac.com/heuring/Site/Photos.html
>

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.

Ji

"Joe"

in reply to Vince Heuring on 29/08/2007 5:42 PM

30/08/2007 1:21 PM


"Mark & Juanita" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Do a google news search for zebrawood and Patrick Olguin (or try O'deen
> or
> Odeen) -- he had similar experience. His account is quite humorous to
> read.
>
> --
> If you're going to be dumb, you better be tough

I miss O'deens posts.

jc


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