mr

"marc rosen"

30/05/2005 4:17 AM

moisture detectors, wood speciaes, and ohm-meters

I have seen a few moisture detectors for lumber and was curious if I
could use an ohm-meter to do the same? Do commercial made moisture
meters have a selector switch for various wood species?
Are there tables for interpreting the conductivity of one wood specie
to another? (Or do I only need to standardize my ohm-meter to a
"known" dry sample before I use it to test the lumber I plan to use?)
Thanks in advance to those who reply(seriously or silly).
Marc


This topic has 3 replies

d

in reply to "marc rosen" on 30/05/2005 4:17 AM

30/05/2005 3:20 PM

Pin meters are a big disappointment. The problem is that you really
have to measure conductance, not conductivity, and that needs a
consistent arrangement of electrodes in the timber, not just a surface
contact. The only way to get any really useful measurements from one
are to use big pins and a slide-hammer to sink them repeatedly each
time. With that and a few bucks worth of electronic front-end meter,
then you're set. An FET front-end and moving-needle meter is easier to
stick a calibration scale to than a digital meter.

If you want rapid NDT measurement, go for a loss factor bridge (still
fairly easy to build, if you understand electronics at the "amateur
radio" level).

On the whole though, measure air humidity and allow time for your
timber to equilibriate. It's much more accurate (and useful) unless you
expend serious effort on your moisture meter.

Gg

"George"

in reply to "marc rosen" on 30/05/2005 4:17 AM

30/05/2005 7:56 AM


"marc rosen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have seen a few moisture detectors for lumber and was curious if I
> could use an ohm-meter to do the same? Do commercial made moisture
> meters have a selector switch for various wood species?
> Are there tables for interpreting the conductivity of one wood specie
> to another? (Or do I only need to standardize my ohm-meter to a
> "known" dry sample before I use it to test the lumber I plan to use?)
> Thanks in advance to those who reply(seriously or silly).
> Marc
>
Lots of resistance in wood, but yes, you can calibrate a megaohm range meter
to read what is there.

http://www.fpl.fs.fed.us/documnts/pdf1994/james94a.pdf
http://www.fpl.fs.fed.us/documnts/fplgtr/fplgtr06.pdf

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "marc rosen" on 30/05/2005 4:17 AM

30/05/2005 12:39 PM

In article <[email protected]>, "George" <george@least> wrote:
>
>"marc rosen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> I have seen a few moisture detectors for lumber and was curious if I
>> could use an ohm-meter to do the same? Do commercial made moisture
>> meters have a selector switch for various wood species?
>> Are there tables for interpreting the conductivity of one wood specie
>> to another? (Or do I only need to standardize my ohm-meter to a
>> "known" dry sample before I use it to test the lumber I plan to use?)
>> Thanks in advance to those who reply(seriously or silly).
>> Marc
>>
>Lots of resistance in wood, but yes, you can calibrate a megaohm range meter
>to read what is there.
>
>http://www.fpl.fs.fed.us/documnts/pdf1994/james94a.pdf
>http://www.fpl.fs.fed.us/documnts/fplgtr/fplgtr06.pdf
>
Waaaaay cool. Thanks for posting those links, George.

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

Nobody ever left footprints in the sands of time by sitting on his butt.
And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?


You’ve reached the end of replies