On Mar 29, 5:28=A0pm, whit3rd <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Mar 29, 1:38=A0pm, rwk <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > 2 large pin oak trees came =A0down in my friends yard in northern NJ.
> > trunks straight for 30 ft and avg 28" in diameter. =A0 can anyone tell
> > me if these trees produce an interesting usable lumber. =A0 wondering i=
f
> > it is worth having the trees milled.
>
> Hard to say; the lower few feet won't be straight grained, which
> leaves
> 50 feet, 28" diameter... call it 40 percent waste (the bark
> part and the core don't make the best lumber), so it's 1300 board
> feet?
>
> Even if this species is 'inferior', it has quite a lot of value.
> Milling to planks, drying, surfacing are all best left to the pros.
> Bragging about the local wood you made into bookcases, stair
> treads, kitchen cabinets... that, you can do yourself.
A friend of the family had some pin oak given to him as part of a
lumber buy (he used to peddle lumber on the side). I got some really
nice 12"w x 5/4 about 6' long pin oak for helping him unload one day.
The only way I could obviously tell the difference between pin oak and
read oak is that in pin oak that all the knots will almost always pop
out. No such thing as a "sound knot". This can cut the effective
yield appreciably depending on the project. Made a couple of simple
backless benches for the "kids" table in the coffee hour area for
church about 3-4 years ago out of this stuff. There were a few
perfect boards in the mix and I used two of those for the seats. Not
a hint of structural problems -- and some of the kids parents use
benches; this being in America means that the benches have had well
over 250 pounds dropped in the middle of a 5' span. The joinery on
this wasn't really fancy/intricate so I can't say much about the
expected problems with respect to humidity changes. The free stuff I
got was all flat sawn; I do remember looking at the edges and not
seeing anything which would lead me to expect quarter sawn would
exhibit significant figure/rays. IIRC it took stain about like red oak
(not like white oak) with an open grain structure. All in all
seemed a lot like red oak with nasty knots to me.
If I had access to a sawyer at reasonable cost and the wood was likely
to be free of metal nasties and I had a place to store the lumber, I'd
probably have it milled.
hex
-30-
On Mar 29, 1:38=A0pm, rwk <[email protected]> wrote:
> 2 large pin oak trees came =A0down in my friends yard in northern NJ.
> trunks straight for 30 ft and avg 28" in diameter. =A0 can anyone tell
> me if these trees produce an interesting usable lumber. =A0 wondering if
> it is worth having the trees milled.
Hard to say; the lower few feet won't be straight grained, which
leaves
50 feet, 28" diameter... call it 40 percent waste (the bark
part and the core don't make the best lumber), so it's 1300 board
feet?
Even if this species is 'inferior', it has quite a lot of value.
Milling to planks, drying, surfacing are all best left to the pros.
Bragging about the local wood you made into bookcases, stair
treads, kitchen cabinets... that, you can do yourself.
Mark & Juanita <[email protected]> wrote:
> We had a couple of Red-Tip Photenias that have succumbed to the fungus
>that is killing them across the country. One died a couple of years ago and
>we left it standing as a bird feeder. Took it down a couple of weeks ago
>and just for fun, cut it into lumber on the bandsaw (about 18" long
>sections).
Roughly how tall was this tree and what was the trunk diameter?
PsS
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On Mar 29, 1:38=A0pm, rwk <[email protected]> wrote:
=A0 wondering if
> it is worth having the trees milled.
> thx
From the "indisputable" wickipedia
"The wood is generally marketed as red oak, but is of significantly
inferior quality, being somewhat weaker, often with many small knots.
1. The wood is hard and heavy and is used in general construction and
for firewood."
On 3/29/2010 3:38 PM, rwk wrote:
> 2 large pin oak trees came down in my friends yard in northern NJ.
> trunks straight for 30 ft and avg 28" in diameter. can anyone tell
> me if these trees produce an interesting usable lumber. wondering if
> it is worth having the trees milled.
> thx
Wood is wood. I'm building my kitchen cupboards with Tamerack
(Larch?). The locals use it for firewood.
http://www.mts.net/~lmlod/cupboards3.jpg
Some of the posters might call it an inferior wood, (it probably is)
but with a little stain and some elbow grease you can do a lot. At
any rate have you ever seen the quality of the wood used in most
products today? Inferior doesn't close to describing the junk out there.
When you concider that the wood will just end up in a dump, why not
give it a try. Bragging rights are worth more per board foot than any
lumber you can buy.
LdB
LdB wrote:
> On 3/29/2010 3:38 PM, rwk wrote:
>> 2 large pin oak trees came down in my friends yard in northern NJ.
>> trunks straight for 30 ft and avg 28" in diameter. can anyone tell
>> me if these trees produce an interesting usable lumber. wondering if
>> it is worth having the trees milled.
>> thx
>
> Wood is wood. I'm building my kitchen cupboards with Tamerack
> (Larch?). The locals use it for firewood.
>
> http://www.mts.net/~lmlod/cupboards3.jpg
>
I'd say that's kind of neat.
> Some of the posters might call it an inferior wood, (it probably is)
> but with a little stain and some elbow grease you can do a lot. At
> any rate have you ever seen the quality of the wood used in most
> products today? Inferior doesn't close to describing the junk out there.
>
Yup.
> When you concider that the wood will just end up in a dump, why not
> give it a try. Bragging rights are worth more per board foot than any
> lumber you can buy.
>
> LdB
We had a couple of Red-Tip Photenias that have succumbed to the fungus
that is killing them across the country. One died a couple of years ago and
we left it standing as a bird feeder. Took it down a couple of weeks ago
and just for fun, cut it into lumber on the bandsaw (about 18" long
sections). It looks like it might have some spalting, wormholes and a good
bit of figure. Don't know what I'll do with it yet, but I'll find some use
in a year or two.
--
There is never a situation where having more rounds is a disadvantage
Rob Leatham
On 03/29/2010 04:14 PM, SonomaProducts.com wrote:
> On Mar 29, 1:38 pm, rwk<[email protected]> wrote:
> wondering if
>> it is worth having the trees milled.
>> thx
>
> From the "indisputable" wickipedia
>
> "The wood is generally marketed as red oak, but is of significantly
> inferior quality, being somewhat weaker, often with many small knots.
> 1. The wood is hard and heavy and is used in general construction and
> for firewood."
Yeah, I don't think I'd bother trying to make it into lumber. You will most likely be
underwhelmed.
--
"Once upon a time, The END."
To reply, eat the taco.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/
On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 12:37:23 -0500, LdB <[email protected]> wrote:
>On 3/29/2010 3:38 PM, rwk wrote:
>> 2 large pin oak trees came down in my friends yard in northern NJ.
>> trunks straight for 30 ft and avg 28" in diameter. can anyone tell
>> me if these trees produce an interesting usable lumber. wondering if
>> it is worth having the trees milled.
>> thx
>
>Wood is wood. I'm building my kitchen cupboards with Tamerack
>(Larch?). The locals use it for firewood.
>
>http://www.mts.net/~lmlod/cupboards3.jpg
>
>Some of the posters might call it an inferior wood, (it probably is)
>but with a little stain and some elbow grease you can do a lot. At
>any rate have you ever seen the quality of the wood used in most
>products today? Inferior doesn't close to describing the junk out there.
>
>When you concider that the wood will just end up in a dump, why not
>give it a try. Bragging rights are worth more per board foot than any
>lumber you can buy.
>
>LdB
Get it "quarter sawn"and the grain should be beautifull. It might not
be as strong as regular white or red oak, but it should be "purty"!!