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chuckb

08/09/2007 4:34 PM

drying and preping wood

this is my first attempt to finish rough cut wood for interior use.

i was given about a thousand bf of big leaf maple rough cut full
dimension 2 x. it has been stacked in an open shed and now has a
moisture content around 16%. it has been down and covered for several
years and some pieces have a little spald in them. i will need to resaw
most of this. would it be better to resaw now or later and then stack to
dry? same for thickness planing.
any advice will be appreciated.
thanks!

chuck b:-)


This topic has 7 replies

LH

"Lew Hodgett"

in reply to chuckb on 08/09/2007 4:34 PM

10/09/2007 7:07 PM


"chuckb" wrote:

> i will need to resaw
>most of this. would it be better to resaw now or later and then stack
to
>dry? same for thickness planing.

IMHO. leave wood in raw form.

Machine on a project by project basis.

Once machined, get it installed, don't leave it laying around.

Lew

LH

"Lew Hodgett"

in reply to chuckb on 08/09/2007 4:34 PM

10/09/2007 8:22 PM


"chuckb" wrote:

> i was hoping the resawn wood would dry faster but i think i just
need to
> be patient!

Remember the cartoon of a vulture sitting in a dead tree looking down
at the road below?

The caption below read:,

"Patience my ass, I want to kill something".

Lew

c

in reply to chuckb on 08/09/2007 4:34 PM

08/09/2007 5:52 PM


>i was given about a thousand bf of big leaf maple rough cut full
>dimension 2 x. it has been stacked in an open shed and now has a
>moisture content around 16%. it has been down and covered for several
>years and some pieces have a little spald in them. i will need to resaw
>most of this. would it be better to resaw now or later and then stack to
>dry? same for thickness planing.
>any advice will be appreciated.
>thanks!
>
>chuck b:-)

Saw now. Restack (and sticker) and maybe clamp down with heavy
weights preferably indoors. The stuff may warp with tensions
released after the resaw. Let the stuff air dry for a few months and
check the moisture every so often. Resaw only what you can easily
store and dry and there are those projects that will want a 2"
thickness. Plane and size as needed when you are doing the project.

Pete

dd

"dadiOH"

in reply to chuckb on 08/09/2007 4:34 PM

08/09/2007 5:32 PM

chuckb wrote:
> this is my first attempt to finish rough cut wood for interior use.
>
> i was given about a thousand bf of big leaf maple rough cut full
> dimension 2 x. it has been stacked in an open shed and now has a
> moisture content around 16%. it has been down and covered for
> several years and some pieces have a little spald in them. i will
> need to resaw most of this. would it be better to resaw now or
> later and then stack to dry? same for thickness planing.
> any advice will be appreciated.
> thanks!

I really don't know but I'd wait...if you resaw now the pieces will
start curling toward the drier outside. Planing shouldn't be a
problem if you plane more or less equally from each side.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico


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chuckb

in reply to chuckb on 08/09/2007 4:34 PM

11/09/2007 3:08 AM

Lew Hodgett wrote:

> "chuckb" wrote:
>
>
>>i will need to resaw
>>most of this. would it be better to resaw now or later and then stack
>
> to
>
>>dry? same for thickness planing.
>
>
> IMHO. leave wood in raw form.
>
> Machine on a project by project basis.
>
> Once machined, get it installed, don't leave it laying around.
>
> Lew
>
>
i was hoping the resawn wood would dry faster but i think i just need to
be patient!

thanks.
chuck b:-)

cc

chuckb

in reply to chuckb on 08/09/2007 4:34 PM

11/09/2007 1:13 AM

[email protected] wrote:
>>i was given about a thousand bf of big leaf maple rough cut full
>>dimension 2 x. it has been stacked in an open shed and now has a
>>moisture content around 16%. it has been down and covered for several
>>years and some pieces have a little spald in them. i will need to resaw
>>most of this. would it be better to resaw now or later and then stack to
>>dry? same for thickness planing.
>>any advice will be appreciated.
>>thanks!
>>
>>chuck b:-)
>
>
> Saw now. Restack (and sticker) and maybe clamp down with heavy
> weights preferably indoors. The stuff may warp with tensions
> released after the resaw. Let the stuff air dry for a few months and
> check the moisture every so often. Resaw only what you can easily
> store and dry and there are those projects that will want a 2"
> thickness. Plane and size as needed when you are doing the project.
>
> Pete

thanks!


chuck b:-)

cc

chuckb

in reply to chuckb on 08/09/2007 4:34 PM

11/09/2007 1:13 AM

dadiOH wrote:

> chuckb wrote:
>
>>this is my first attempt to finish rough cut wood for interior use.
>>
>>i was given about a thousand bf of big leaf maple rough cut full
>>dimension 2 x. it has been stacked in an open shed and now has a
>>moisture content around 16%. it has been down and covered for
>>several years and some pieces have a little spald in them. i will
>>need to resaw most of this. would it be better to resaw now or
>>later and then stack to dry? same for thickness planing.
>>any advice will be appreciated.
>>thanks!
>
>
> I really don't know but I'd wait...if you resaw now the pieces will
> start curling toward the drier outside. Planing shouldn't be a
> problem if you plane more or less equally from each side.
>


thanks
chuck b:-)


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