Cd

"Cyrille de Brébisson"

29/09/2005 2:57 PM

turning a log in wood

hello,

I have a 5ft 10'' log that I would like to transform in useable wood...

question is do I need to let the log dry first and then cut it in boards, or
should I slice it when wet, or in between?

thanks, cyrille


This topic has 7 replies

GG

"George"

in reply to "Cyrille de Brébisson" on 29/09/2005 2:57 PM

29/09/2005 10:40 AM


"Cyrille de Brébisson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> hello,
>
> I have a 5ft 10'' log that I would like to transform in useable wood...
>
> question is do I need to let the log dry first and then cut it in boards,
> or should I slice it when wet, or in between?
>
> thanks, cyrille
>

Sooner the better on the sawing. http://www.fpl.fs.fed.us/ and searches on
sawing/stacking/drying will give you a lot of good information to use in
making the best of your log.

GG

"George"

in reply to "Cyrille de Brébisson" on 29/09/2005 2:57 PM

29/09/2005 4:48 PM


"Australopithecus scobis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 14:36:58 +0000, Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
>
>> one year per
>> inch.
>
> ...of thickness...
>
> ;)

Which is, of course, baloney. It varies according to species and climate
and was conservative to begin with. Bring wood into an area comfortable for
habitation and throw away the rules. Cherry dropped in late July and sawed
4/4 is 4% by the end of February in my basement. Pine's faster.

GG

"George"

in reply to "Cyrille de Brébisson" on 29/09/2005 2:57 PM

30/09/2005 7:35 AM


"Dan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I had a chance to work at an oldtime sawmill over Labor Day. Some logs
> were
> cut a few days ago, some had been sitting for years. I brought my moisture
> meter along just for fun. The meter pegs out at 20 percent.
>
> Every board I checked maxed out the meter. Old logs, new logs, inner wood,
> outer wood, all of 'em. Nothing under 20 percent. I checked the meter on
> what I knew was dry wood and it read about 6%, so I know it was working.
>
> Near as I could tell, it doesn't matter how long the log lays around. It's
> not going to dry, it's going to rot. If you bring it inside and keep it
> warm it might dry, but I'd bet it would take more than a few years. It's
> got to be cut up.

If they were boards, your average relative humidity must have been ~ 85%.
That applies indoors or out, by the way. Lower the RH, lower the EMC, lower
the actual MC.

With logs, of course, bark and sun are the major players.


rr

"ray"

in reply to "Cyrille de Brébisson" on 29/09/2005 2:57 PM

29/09/2005 6:39 PM


"George" <George@least> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Australopithecus scobis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 14:36:58 +0000, Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
>>
>>> one year per
>>> inch.
>>
>> ...of thickness...
>>
>> ;)
>
> Which is, of course, baloney. It varies according to species and climate
> and was conservative to begin with. Bring wood into an area comfortable
> for habitation and throw away the rules. Cherry dropped in late July and
> sawed 4/4 is 4% by the end of February in my basement. Pine's faster.

I had some fresh cut cherry that I dried in my garage. I weighed a 1"
thick
piece every day. On the 9th day it stopped losing weight. The wood was
dry. My garage was about 120 degrees F with a relative humidity of 5%.
I lived in Las Vegas. So I agree the time to dry wood does vary with
ambient conditions. The 1 year per inch rule of thumb is for outdoor
drying in the northeast.

Ds

Dan

in reply to "Cyrille de Brébisson" on 29/09/2005 2:57 PM

30/09/2005 2:41 AM

On Thu 29 Sep 2005 09:57:37a, "Cyrille de Brébisson" <[email protected]>
wrote in news:[email protected]:

>
> I have a 5ft 10'' log that I would like to transform in useable
> wood...
>
> question is do I need to let the log dry first and then cut it in
> boards, or should I slice it when wet, or in between?
>

I had a chance to work at an oldtime sawmill over Labor Day. Some logs were
cut a few days ago, some had been sitting for years. I brought my moisture
meter along just for fun. The meter pegs out at 20 percent.

Every board I checked maxed out the meter. Old logs, new logs, inner wood,
outer wood, all of 'em. Nothing under 20 percent. I checked the meter on
what I knew was dry wood and it read about 6%, so I know it was working.

Near as I could tell, it doesn't matter how long the log lays around. It's
not going to dry, it's going to rot. If you bring it inside and keep it
warm it might dry, but I'd bet it would take more than a few years. It's
got to be cut up.

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "Cyrille de Brébisson" on 29/09/2005 2:57 PM

29/09/2005 2:36 PM


"Cyrille de Brébisson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> hello,
>
> I have a 5ft 10'' log that I would like to transform in useable wood...
>
> question is do I need to let the log dry first and then cut it in boards,
> or should I slice it when wet, or in between?

Cut first, stack with stickers (spacers) and let it dry about one year per
inch.

As

Australopithecus scobis

in reply to "Cyrille de Brébisson" on 29/09/2005 2:57 PM

29/09/2005 2:50 PM

On Thu, 29 Sep 2005 14:36:58 +0000, Edwin Pawlowski wrote:

> one year per
> inch.

...of thickness...

;)


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