GD

Glen Duff

12/06/2004 12:12 PM

Butternut Qualities

I just purchased 175 bdft of top grade butternut at a great price of
$2.50 Canadian per bdft. I think the going retail price is in the $7.50
range so I'm pretty pleased about that.

I have no experiences whatsoever with butternut and would appreciate any
comments on the characteristics of the wood. I planed and sanded a 6" x
12 ft board and it looked really good. There was only one small knot on
the entire piece. It seemed to take a finishing nail near the end of
the board without any splitting.


Is it primarily a structural wood. Can it be stained, painted, etc.

Thanks in advance.

Glen Duff


This topic has 4 replies

Nn

Nova

in reply to Glen Duff on 12/06/2004 12:12 PM

12/06/2004 1:29 PM

Glen Duff wrote:

> I just purchased 175 bdft of top grade butternut at a great price of
> $2.50 Canadian per bdft. I think the going retail price is in the $7.50
> range so I'm pretty pleased about that.
>
> I have no experiences whatsoever with butternut and would appreciate any
> comments on the characteristics of the wood. I planed and sanded a 6" x
> 12 ft board and it looked really good. There was only one small knot on
> the entire piece. It seemed to take a finishing nail near the end of
> the board without any splitting.
>
> Is it primarily a structural wood. Can it be stained, painted, etc.
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Glen Duff

See:

http://www.woodbin.com/ref/wood/butternut.htm

--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
(Remove "SPAM" from email address to reply)

FF

Fred

in reply to Glen Duff on 12/06/2004 12:12 PM

12/06/2004 1:20 PM

Glen Duff wrote:
> I just purchased 175 bdft of top grade butternut at a great price of
> $2.50 Canadian per bdft. I think the going retail price is in the $7.50
> range so I'm pretty pleased about that.
>
> I have no experiences whatsoever with butternut and would appreciate any
> comments on the characteristics of the wood. I planed and sanded a 6" x
> 12 ft board and it looked really good. There was only one small knot on
> the entire piece. It seemed to take a finishing nail near the end of
> the board without any splitting.
>
>
> Is it primarily a structural wood. Can it be stained, painted, etc.
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Glen Duff
>
Butternut works well with power or hand tools and is also good for carving.
However, it is about as soft as pine and as strong as well. So it is best
used where not subject to impact or heavy structural loads.
Fred

UA

Unisaw A100

in reply to Glen Duff on 12/06/2004 12:12 PM

12/06/2004 7:32 PM

Butternut has a tendency to fuzz when sanded but finishes up
well under a plane or scraper. In fact it's recommended
that it be Neandered.

It can be stained to look nearly like walnut. Personally I
like it without stain.

UA100

DH

"Dan Hamill"

in reply to Glen Duff on 12/06/2004 12:12 PM

12/06/2004 7:43 PM

I find the characteristics of working with it very much like cherry, but
softer.

It is quite pretty just oiled....I have never stained it, so don't know how
it takes it......

That's a good price, but I get it for about $4 CAD normally.

Use it, experiment, enjoy.

Dan Hamill
Atlantic Canada

"Glen Duff" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I just purchased 175 bdft of top grade butternut at a great price of
> $2.50 Canadian per bdft. I think the going retail price is in the $7.50
> range so I'm pretty pleased about that.
>
> I have no experiences whatsoever with butternut and would appreciate any
> comments on the characteristics of the wood. I planed and sanded a 6" x
> 12 ft board and it looked really good. There was only one small knot on
> the entire piece. It seemed to take a finishing nail near the end of
> the board without any splitting.
>
>
> Is it primarily a structural wood. Can it be stained, painted, etc.
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Glen Duff
>


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