Don't you love it when ....
Neighbour commissioned a sink benchtop; they are supplying the timber. Small
job, easy, right?
First timber they come up with was sappy Rimu 9"x3/4", full of borer it turned
out. I called them into the shop after planing it, got them to take a look and
they took it away again (1 hour blown) and came back with some 6" x 1 1/2"
macrocarpa.
Planed it, gauged it, trued everything up ready for gluing. Lots of tiny and
not so tiny dead knots. Hard to find a decent layout. Well.
Left the shop to get a cuppa and a mask-free breather and came back to find the
planks had warped, as well as cupped, visibly since planing nary 1 3/4 hours
before. Oh ye gods. [***censored***] I just hope the ends aren't going to start
to split, since I have cut to within 6" of final length ...
<big sigh> -Peter
--
=========================================
firstname dot lastname at gmail fullstop com
I would make sure you use breadboard ends or attach some cross runners
on the under side and finish all sides with a good film finish if you
have material that likes to make such moves.
Peter Huebner wrote:
> Don't you love it when ....
>
> Neighbour commissioned a sink benchtop; they are supplying the timber. Small
> job, easy, right?
>
> First timber they come up with was sappy Rimu 9"x3/4", full of borer it turned
> out. I called them into the shop after planing it, got them to take a look and
> they took it away again (1 hour blown) and came back with some 6" x 1 1/2"
> macrocarpa.
> Planed it, gauged it, trued everything up ready for gluing. Lots of tiny and
> not so tiny dead knots. Hard to find a decent layout. Well.
>
> Left the shop to get a cuppa and a mask-free breather and came back to find the
> planks had warped, as well as cupped, visibly since planing nary 1 3/4 hours
> before. Oh ye gods. [***censored***] I just hope the ends aren't going to start
> to split, since I have cut to within 6" of final length ...
>
> <big sigh> -Peter
>
> --
> =========================================
> firstname dot lastname at gmail fullstop com
On Fri, 24 Nov 2006 12:29:44 +1300, Peter Huebner
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>Don't you love it when ....
>
>Neighbour commissioned a sink benchtop; they are supplying the timber. Small
>job, easy, right?
>
>First timber they come up with was sappy Rimu 9"x3/4", full of borer it turned
>out. I called them into the shop after planing it, got them to take a look and
>they took it away again (1 hour blown) and came back with some 6" x 1 1/2"
>macrocarpa.
>Planed it, gauged it, trued everything up ready for gluing. Lots of tiny and
>not so tiny dead knots. Hard to find a decent layout. Well.
>
>Left the shop to get a cuppa and a mask-free breather and came back to find the
>planks had warped, as well as cupped, visibly since planing nary 1 3/4 hours
>before. Oh ye gods. [***censored***] I just hope the ends aren't going to start
>to split, since I have cut to within 6" of final length ...
>
><big sigh> -Peter
>
While I am not familiar with that wood, it sounds like its not dried
properly, Peter.
In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] says...
> While I am not familiar with that wood, it sounds like its not dried
> properly, Peter.
>
That is my conclusion also. I clamped them all together, standing on edge, with
spacers between and put them up on blocks so the air can flow evenly on all
sides. The cupping seems to have reverted back somewhat already.
I'm going to leave it for a while before I do anything more with it.
Mostly I was just being exasperated with these 'little jobs' where someone
brings in their own lumber, not understanding anything much about it, and it
turns into a headache, or an outright pain.
-P.
--
=========================================
firstname dot lastname at gmail fullstop com