A cedar hydro pole with a transformer in the lane behind the house
caught fire one day. The hydro guys dropped a new pole in next to it
and cut out the old one - 4 ft sections. I asked for the pieces and
got them all figuring that there should be some nice old wood in
there. After close examination of a cut line the outer 1 - 1 1/5 "
was mostly punky rotted and the innner looked very good with straight
radial cracks almost to the centre. I split the pole sections along
the cracks with an axe into wedges. Ran the wedges into the band saw
and cleaned up in the planer. Because of the radial cracks this
wasted alot of wood.
I now have a bunch of 1/4 'sawn' cedar - still aromatic, about 3/4"
wide random width.
Now I need a suitable project for this nice looking wood.
Pete
[email protected] wrote:
...
> I now have a bunch of 1/4 'sawn' cedar - still aromatic, about 3/4"
> wide random width.
>
> Now I need a suitable project for this nice looking wood.
Line small cedar chests or use it for decorative boxes, etc., is the
obvious...
It can be edge glued successfully if needed, but for linings in
particular, wouldn't be necessary.
[email protected] wrote:
> A cedar hydro pole with a transformer in the lane behind the house
> caught fire one day.
I don't want to startup the English vs. English thread again, but what
is a hydro pole?
I'm taking hydro to mean water and since you say "pole with a
transformer" I'm thinking of a telephone pole. Picturing a water line
run between poles kinda makes me laugh. ;-)
Mike
[email protected] wrote:
> A cedar hydro pole with a transformer in the lane behind the house
> caught fire one day.
I don't want to start the English vs. English thread again, but what is
a hydro pole?
I'm taking hydro to mean water, and since you said "pole with a
transformer", I'm thinking of a telephone pole. Picturing a water line
run between poles kinda makes me laugh. ;-)
On Fri, 27 Oct 2006 13:00:38 -0700, Mike wrote:
> [email protected] wrote:
>> A cedar hydro pole with a transformer in the lane behind the house
>> caught fire one day.
>
> I don't want to start the English vs. English thread again, but what is
> a hydro pole?
>
> I'm taking hydro to mean water, and since you said "pole with a
> transformer", I'm thinking of a telephone pole. Picturing a water line
> run between poles kinda makes me laugh. ;-)
Hydroelectric ... means (originally) that the source of the electricity
was moving water. Now the juice could come from nukes, solar or whatever
and the pole termninology wouldn't change.
That's my story aqnd I'm sticking to it.
;-)
Bill
In article <[email protected]>, Mike
<[email protected]> wrote:
> [email protected] wrote:
> > A cedar hydro pole with a transformer in the lane behind the house
> > caught fire one day.
>
> I don't want to start the English vs. English thread again, but what is
> a hydro pole?
>
> I'm taking hydro to mean water, and since you said "pole with a
> transformer", I'm thinking of a telephone pole. Picturing a water line
> run between poles kinda makes me laugh. ;-)
>
Pete's posting from mts.net which means he's from Manitoba, Canada
(where I grew up just north of Winnipeg).
Virtually all power generation in Manitoba is hydroelectric. "Manitoba
Hydro" is the name of the electric utility, so "hydro pole" is common
usage.
Call it regional terminology...
On Fri, 27 Oct 2006 17:37:13 GMT, [email protected] wrote:
>A cedar hydro pole with a transformer in the lane behind the house
>caught fire one day. The hydro guys dropped a new pole in next to it
>and cut out the old one - 4 ft sections. I asked for the pieces and
>got them all figuring that there should be some nice old wood in
>there. After close examination of a cut line the outer 1 - 1 1/5 "
>was mostly punky rotted and the innner looked very good with straight
>radial cracks almost to the centre. I split the pole sections along
>the cracks with an axe into wedges. Ran the wedges into the band saw
>and cleaned up in the planer. Because of the radial cracks this
>wasted alot of wood.
>
>I now have a bunch of 1/4 'sawn' cedar - still aromatic, about 3/4"
>wide random width.
>
>Now I need a suitable project for this nice looking wood.
If it weren't for all the work you did with it, I'd call that one a
gloat. Cedar is insanely expensive in my neck of the woods- and hard
to find these days.
Tradtional use is lining for chests, but it's nice for all sorts of
things- especially outdoor furniture,
<[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
>A cedar hydro pole with a transformer in the lane behind the house
> caught fire one day. The hydro guys dropped a new pole in next to it
> and cut out the old one - 4 ft sections. I asked for the pieces and
> got them all figuring that there should be some nice old wood in
> there. After close examination of a cut line the outer 1 - 1 1/5 "
> was mostly punky rotted and the innner looked very good with straight
> radial cracks almost to the centre. I split the pole sections along
> the cracks with an axe into wedges. Ran the wedges into the band saw
> and cleaned up in the planer. Because of the radial cracks this
> wasted alot of wood.
>
> I now have a bunch of 1/4 'sawn' cedar - still aromatic, about 3/4"
> wide random width.
>
> Now I need a suitable project for this nice looking wood.
>
> Pete
>
Makes good kindling.