This may be old stuff to those of you in wetter climates but something
easily overlooked in dry AZ.
I'm furring out a bathroom wall before installing a vanity I built.
I was trimming some 2 X 6's to length on the chop saw and since they
were ten footers and I don't have a support that long I pressed the
Unisaw into service to support the long end. A handy cutoff of
pressure treated lumber on top of the fence was just the right height.
I finished my cuts, hauled the lumber into the bathroom and called it
a day. Unfortunately, the next day when I hit the shop I discovered
that I had knocked the block of PT onto the saw tabletop and
underneath was a (not so) nice rust spot.
Mike Pio wrote:
...
> Would this have happened if the saw table had a fresh coat of wax on it?
> I'm not sure if the OP's saw was coated or not, but I'm curious just how
> corrosive the ACQ lumber is.
Yes, but probably not extensively overnight. Wax alone, however, is
very hard to keep on a working table sufficiently that it doesn't show
wear spots very quickly.
Having a recently waxed surface would undoubtedly have helped in the
short term, however.
I get splots in the summer simply from perspiration drops even in a very
dry area.
The same thing OP observed can happen w/ less aggressive action w/
almost any framing lumber--it is almost universally wet enough to cause
rusting of bare ferrous metal surfaces.
Robert Allison wrote:
...
> You have experienced the new ACQ treated lumber. It is
> extremely corrosive and this is what happens when the
> chemicals in it come into contact with unprotected metal. I
> did an experiment with it and found that after two months,
> there is significant deterioration of common nails, zinc
> coated bolts and anything else that is not stainless steel or
> double dipped hot galvanized.
Yeah, this is yet another case where imo the cure is worse than the
disease... :(
Much other testing has shown the same thing, of course. I'm not
convinced the double-dip galvanized will hold up for really long term,
either.
"Wes Stewart" <n7ws_@*yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>>
>>Would this have happened if the saw table had a fresh coat of wax on it?
>>I'm not sure if the OP's saw was coated or not, but I'm curious just how
>>corrosive the ACQ lumber is.
Yes. Wax is for short-term turnback of liquids and corrosive chips. A
green cherry or oak curl neglected overnight on even a well-waxed jointer
table will leave its mark. Ask any turner.
On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 08:26:49 -0600, Robert Allison wrote
(in article <JglOe.6385$137.4497@trnddc08>):
> Wes Stewart wrote:
>
>
> You have experienced the new ACQ treated lumber. It is
> extremely corrosive and this is what happens when the
> chemicals in it come into contact with unprotected metal. I
> did an experiment with it and found that after two months,
> there is significant deterioration of common nails, zinc
> coated bolts and anything else that is not stainless steel or
> double dipped hot galvanized.
>
>
Good advice for any fasteners used on "wet" wood or wood that might become
wet (i.e. sill plates)
Once the fasteners go away, so does the wall.
While renovating this old house, I came across may nails that were corroded
to the point of "not doing squat". The occasional galvanized nail, though
still corroded, looked very serviceable.
-Bruce
On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 12:04:06 -0500, Patriarch
<[email protected]> wrote:
[snip]
>
>Good luck with the bathroom project. I'm installing the vanity in our this
>morning. It was supposed to happen last week, but when laying things out,
>I neglected to properly account for the location of the cold water angle
>stop, and had to re-route the plumbing.
Thanks. This project started a long time ago. Something else always
coming up, like rotator cuff surgery following too much hand sanding
and three months of recuperation, et cetera...
>
>I'd rather level ipe with a scrub plane than sweat solder copper pipe. ;-}
I was REALLY "sweating" it when I had to change some plumbing buried
in a concrete block wall. :-) That's part of the reason that I'm
furring out instead of butting into the existing wall. Figured it was
easier to hide it than to make it pretty. Plus I think the builder
hired a crew of drunk Mexicans to lay up the walls. There isn't a
plumb one in the house. Of course it's a Santa Fe style house so it's
supposed to look like it's made of mud but when you start hanging
cabinets, and so forth it's a PITA.
Wes Stewart wrote:
> This may be old stuff to those of you in wetter climates but something
> easily overlooked in dry AZ.
>
> I'm furring out a bathroom wall before installing a vanity I built.
>
> I was trimming some 2 X 6's to length on the chop saw and since they
> were ten footers and I don't have a support that long I pressed the
> Unisaw into service to support the long end. A handy cutoff of
> pressure treated lumber on top of the fence was just the right height.
>
> I finished my cuts, hauled the lumber into the bathroom and called it
> a day. Unfortunately, the next day when I hit the shop I discovered
> that I had knocked the block of PT onto the saw tabletop and
> underneath was a (not so) nice rust spot.
You have experienced the new ACQ treated lumber. It is
extremely corrosive and this is what happens when the
chemicals in it come into contact with unprotected metal. I
did an experiment with it and found that after two months,
there is significant deterioration of common nails, zinc
coated bolts and anything else that is not stainless steel or
double dipped hot galvanized.
--
Robert Allison
Rimshot, Inc.
Georgetown, TX
Wes Stewart <n7ws_@*yahoo.com> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
> This may be old stuff to those of you in wetter climates but something
> easily overlooked in dry AZ.
>
> I'm furring out a bathroom wall before installing a vanity I built.
>
> I was trimming some 2 X 6's to length on the chop saw and since they
> were ten footers and I don't have a support that long I pressed the
> Unisaw into service to support the long end. A handy cutoff of
> pressure treated lumber on top of the fence was just the right height.
>
> I finished my cuts, hauled the lumber into the bathroom and called it
> a day. Unfortunately, the next day when I hit the shop I discovered
> that I had knocked the block of PT onto the saw tabletop and
> underneath was a (not so) nice rust spot.
Red oak loaded into the shop from the back of a pickup truck in a rainstorm
has exactly the same effect. Didn't matter that the saw table was freshly
waxed. Well, perhaps it wasn't quite as bad as your PT-induced mess, but
it required a 20 minute cleaning.
Good luck with the bathroom project. I'm installing the vanity in our this
morning. It was supposed to happen last week, but when laying things out,
I neglected to properly account for the location of the cold water angle
stop, and had to re-route the plumbing.
I'd rather level ipe with a scrub plane than sweat solder copper pipe. ;-}
Patriarch
"Robert Allison" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:JglOe.6385$137.4497@trnddc08...
> Wes Stewart wrote:
>
>> This may be old stuff to those of you in wetter climates but something
>> easily overlooked in dry AZ. I'm furring out a bathroom wall before
>> installing a vanity I built.
>>
>> I was trimming some 2 X 6's to length on the chop saw and since they
>> were ten footers and I don't have a support that long I pressed the
>> Unisaw into service to support the long end. A handy cutoff of
>> pressure treated lumber on top of the fence was just the right height.
>>
>> I finished my cuts, hauled the lumber into the bathroom and called it
>> a day. Unfortunately, the next day when I hit the shop I discovered
>> that I had knocked the block of PT onto the saw tabletop and
>> underneath was a (not so) nice rust spot.
>
> You have experienced the new ACQ treated lumber. It is extremely
> corrosive and this is what happens when the chemicals in it come into
> contact with unprotected metal. I did an experiment with it and found
> that after two months, there is significant deterioration of common nails,
> zinc coated bolts and anything else that is not stainless steel or double
> dipped hot galvanized.
>
> --
> Robert Allison Rimshot, Inc.
> Georgetown, TX
Would this have happened if the saw table had a fresh coat of wax on it?
I'm not sure if the OP's saw was coated or not, but I'm curious just how
corrosive the ACQ lumber is.
On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 07:40:11 -0700, "Mike Pio" <[email protected]>
wrote:
[snip]
>
>Would this have happened if the saw table had a fresh coat of wax on it?
>I'm not sure if the OP's saw was coated or not, but I'm curious just how
>corrosive the ACQ lumber is.
Not fresh---this is AZ so it doesn't need it often--- but it has been
treated with Top Coat.
"Mike Pio" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:_slOe.2066$sw6.1747@fed1read05...
>
> Would this have happened if the saw table had a fresh coat of wax on it?
> I'm not sure if the OP's saw was coated or not, but I'm curious just how
> corrosive the ACQ lumber is.
Absolutely iot would with a fresh coat of wax. Wax is not a good water
barrier.
Mike Pio wrote:
> "Robert Allison" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:JglOe.6385$137.4497@trnddc08...
>
>>Wes Stewart wrote:
>>
>>
>>>This may be old stuff to those of you in wetter climates but something
>>>easily overlooked in dry AZ. I'm furring out a bathroom wall before
>>>installing a vanity I built.
>>>
>>>I was trimming some 2 X 6's to length on the chop saw and since they
>>>were ten footers and I don't have a support that long I pressed the
>>>Unisaw into service to support the long end. A handy cutoff of
>>>pressure treated lumber on top of the fence was just the right height.
>>>
>>>I finished my cuts, hauled the lumber into the bathroom and called it
>>>a day. Unfortunately, the next day when I hit the shop I discovered
>>>that I had knocked the block of PT onto the saw tabletop and
>>>underneath was a (not so) nice rust spot.
>>
>>You have experienced the new ACQ treated lumber. It is extremely
>>corrosive and this is what happens when the chemicals in it come into
>>contact with unprotected metal. I did an experiment with it and found
>>that after two months, there is significant deterioration of common nails,
>>zinc coated bolts and anything else that is not stainless steel or double
>>dipped hot galvanized.
>>
>>--
>>Robert Allison Rimshot, Inc.
>>Georgetown, TX
>
>
> Would this have happened if the saw table had a fresh coat of wax on it?
> I'm not sure if the OP's saw was coated or not, but I'm curious just how
> corrosive the ACQ lumber is.
>
>
Yup!
Wes Stewart wrote:
> This may be old stuff to those of you in wetter climates but something
> easily overlooked in dry AZ.
>
> I'm furring out a bathroom wall before installing a vanity I built.
>
> I was trimming some 2 X 6's to length on the chop saw and since they
> were ten footers and I don't have a support that long I pressed the
> Unisaw into service to support the long end. A handy cutoff of
> pressure treated lumber on top of the fence was just the right height.
>
> I finished my cuts, hauled the lumber into the bathroom and called it
> a day. Unfortunately, the next day when I hit the shop I discovered
> that I had knocked the block of PT onto the saw tabletop and
> underneath was a (not so) nice rust spot.
I try never to leave any wood on my TS overnight for that very reason.
Out of habit, I clear off the cast iron portion and pile up stuff on the
laminate table board.
Dave
"Robert Allison" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:JglOe.6385$137.4497@trnddc08...
> You have experienced the new ACQ treated lumber. It is extremely
> corrosive and this is what happens when the chemicals in it come into
> contact with unprotected metal. I did an experiment with it and found
> that after two months, there is significant deterioration of common nails,
> zinc coated bolts and anything else that is not stainless steel or double
> dipped hot galvanized.
Actually any WET lumber will do this. 5 years ago I learned this with the
old style WET PT lumber.