d

21/01/2005 1:41 PM

Making a table from a cross section, how can I stop it splitting?

I cut up wood for my furnace, and sometimes I get some nice looking
cross sections that my wife wants to be made into coffee tables and the
like. Imagine: 24" diameter and around 2-4 inches thick, cross cut from
a maple or oak tree.

Now I know that if I leave them to dry they will split. How can I stop
this? I plan to plane and sand the top side, do I need to oil the wood
or wax it or do something else to it, so that it won't split?
Thanks all!

-Dean


This topic has 4 replies

d

in reply to [email protected] on 21/01/2005 1:41 PM

21/01/2005 3:12 PM

Sorry - what do you mean by "saw it in half through the center"? Its a
horizontal cross section of a tree, so you can see all the rings
centered in the middle.

b

in reply to [email protected] on 21/01/2005 1:41 PM

21/01/2005 3:51 PM

On 21 Jan 2005 13:41:45 -0800, [email protected] wrote:

>I cut up wood for my furnace, and sometimes I get some nice looking
>cross sections that my wife wants to be made into coffee tables and the
>like. Imagine: 24" diameter and around 2-4 inches thick, cross cut from
>a maple or oak tree.
>
>Now I know that if I leave them to dry they will split. How can I stop
>this? I plan to plane and sand the top side, do I need to oil the wood
>or wax it or do something else to it, so that it won't split?
>Thanks all!
>
>-Dean


saw it in half through the center. coat all surfaces thickly with wax.
dry 1 year per inch. clean the wax off. joint and join. pray.

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to [email protected] on 21/01/2005 1:41 PM

22/01/2005 12:57 AM

On 21 Jan 2005 15:12:25 -0800, [email protected] wrote:

>Sorry - what do you mean by "saw it in half through the center"?

Saw it in half along a diameter. Then let it dry slowly and you should
get two pie-shaped but unsplit wedges. Joint them back into
semicircles (if now slightly oval) and re-assemble.

If you care about it staying circular then use two disks and
re-assemble three sawn-down sections as 120° wedges.

The other way is to dry it as a disk, but put a large hole thorugh the
pith first (up to 1/3rd of the diameter, you'll have to experiment).
Then fill the hole up with something, such as glass.

b

in reply to [email protected] on 21/01/2005 1:41 PM

21/01/2005 5:11 PM

On 21 Jan 2005 15:12:25 -0800, [email protected] wrote:

>Sorry - what do you mean by "saw it in half through the center"? Its a
>horizontal cross section of a tree, so you can see all the rings
>centered in the middle.


make it into two half circles.

kinda brutal, but getting slices like that to not crack is about
impossible. people use all kinds of tricks to do it, and some of them
probably work better than others. do some more research- you might
find something that will work for you.

Google:
salt water cure
PEG


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