JC

"J. Clarke"

04/01/2007 11:30 PM

Lyptus first impression

Turning 8/4 stock into half inch. Resting a bit before I tackle the next
piece. (OK, so I'm an old fat guy who spends too much time in front of
the TV)

Stuff weighs a ton.

Makes dust. Ran one piece through the jointer and grabbed a respirator.
Huge cloud of dust, so finely divided that it looks like smoke. Thought
I'd set something on fire for a minute. Doesn't smell particularly
pleasant either. If I'm going to do much work with this stuff I may want
to rig real dust collection on the jointer.

Makes splinters on cut ends. Not great big ones, just little annoying
ones.

Careful on the feed, going through the bandsaw I burned it a little bit.
Never managed that before. Other than the burning though it saws nicely.
Makes dust.

Has a good luster, even coming fresh out of the planer it's shiny enough
to see reflections.

Did I say it makes dust?

Interesting color, light, reddish, almost salmon-pink. Think it might
turn out to be pretty. Have to see what it looks like in an assembled
piece though.

--
--John to email, dial "usenet" and validate
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)


This topic has 3 replies

c

in reply to "J. Clarke" on 04/01/2007 11:30 PM

05/01/2007 3:13 PM

On 4 Jan 2007 23:30:04 GMT, "J. Clarke" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Turning 8/4 stock into half inch. Resting a bit before I tackle the next
>piece. (OK, so I'm an old fat guy who spends too much time in front of
>the TV)

I thought it was just me.
>
>Stuff weighs a ton.

No it doesn't. It weighs more.
>
>Makes dust. Ran one piece through the jointer and grabbed a respirator.
>Huge cloud of dust, so finely divided that it looks like smoke. Thought
>I'd set something on fire for a minute. Doesn't smell particularly
>pleasant either. If I'm going to do much work with this stuff I may want
>to rig real dust collection on the jointer.

Correct on the dust as fine as smoke. Think about using a box fan
with a fine furnace filter behind it. All the dust collectors you
probably have won't clear the air enuff. That dust may irritate nasal
membranes and swell eyes. The smell is an aquired taste like
aromatic cedar.
>
>Makes splinters on cut ends. Not great big ones, just little annoying
>ones.

Wait until you use a router on any part that begins to upgrain. I'll
probably be shredded for suggesting moving the router backwards is
some spots.
>
>Careful on the feed, going through the bandsaw I burned it a little bit.
>Never managed that before. Other than the burning though it saws nicely.
>Makes dust.

With a new blade, I found it sawed slowly and wanted to stall the
bandsaw. Without a dust collection system going, you would think
wood this heavy would drop any dust like gravel. Dust collector and
a box fan/filter next to the blade and a full face respirator makes
the cutting easier.
>
>Has a good luster, even coming fresh out of the planer it's shiny enough
>to see reflections.
>
>Did I say it makes dust?

Did I mention the dust is fine as smoke?
>
>Interesting color, light, reddish, almost salmon-pink. Think it might
>turn out to be pretty. Have to see what it looks like in an assembled
>piece though.

It will turn out very pretty - nice grain patterns and color. The
ends of the boards should have a code stamped in for density.
Density is not consistant and affects colors. To get a sense of
color matching, try to use the same numbers for glue ups.

Enjoy

Pete

JC

"J. Clarke"

in reply to "J. Clarke" on 04/01/2007 11:30 PM

05/01/2007 3:00 AM

On Thu, 04 Jan 2007 23:30:04 +0000, J. Clarke wrote:

> Turning 8/4 stock into half inch. Resting a bit before I tackle the next
> piece. (OK, so I'm an old fat guy who spends too much time in front of
> the TV)
>
> Stuff weighs a ton.
>
> Makes dust. Ran one piece through the jointer and grabbed a respirator.
> Huge cloud of dust, so finely divided that it looks like smoke. Thought
> I'd set something on fire for a minute. Doesn't smell particularly
> pleasant either. If I'm going to do much work with this stuff I may want
> to rig real dust collection on the jointer.
>
> Makes splinters on cut ends. Not great big ones, just little annoying
> ones.
>
> Careful on the feed, going through the bandsaw I burned it a little bit.
> Never managed that before. Other than the burning though it saws nicely.
> Makes dust.
>
> Has a good luster, even coming fresh out of the planer it's shiny enough
> to see reflections.
>
> Did I say it makes dust?
>
> Interesting color, light, reddish, almost salmon-pink. Think it might
> turn out to be pretty. Have to see what it looks like in an assembled
> piece though.

Grain looks kind of like Makore, but with some occasional patches of curly
figure. There seems to be some kind of bug that gets into it while it's
growing, there are several little round holes, maybe a sixteenth inch or
a wee bit more in diameter all the way through, and one tunnel showed up on
the face of one of the boards I sawed out of the 8/4. Haven't found an
actual bug yet though--presume the KD cycle either killed them or ran them
out.

Band saw blade tried to wander on a couple of the cuts and the saw bogged
down in a couple as well. Thought the blade was getting dull then I
noticed how much cup developed in a couple of the slices--seems like there
was some residual tension.
>

--

--John

to email, dial "usenet" and validate

(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)

JC

"J. Clarke"

in reply to "J. Clarke" on 04/01/2007 11:30 PM

05/01/2007 3:30 PM

Turns out that the splinters itch like the blazes if you don't get them
out right away.

--

--John

to email, dial "usenet" and validate

(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)


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