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- From: bruce@uxc.cso.uiuc.edu (Bruce Krueger)
- Subject: fresh spalded sugar maple -- turn green, or dry first??
- Message-ID: <C1E241.GDq@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.cso.uiuc.edu (Net Noise owner)
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 02:40:48 GMT
- Lines: 65
-
- ok, the postings on lathes and the extensive speculation re the unknown
- shoulda-been-maple got me to wondrin'...
-
- I've got a pile (rough guess, 5-800 lbs.) of five green sections of a
- sugar maple (<- pretty certain about this, as I knew the tree, so to
- speak) that the city tree crew took down just west of my shop about
- two weeks ago, and since I've been doing some turning on my lathe
- over the (relatively) slow winter months, I asked the gents with
- the chain saws if they'd mind cutting a few sections out of the
- parts of the tree that had been discolored by the fungus disease (?)
- that was the cause of the tree's demise. they were more than happy
- to oblige, and mentioned that the 'figuring' (?'spalding'??) made
- that kind of wood desireable to woodworkers, and I told them that I'd
- like to do something along those lines with it myself (as opposed to
- using it for firewood/chips/&c.), and as they made successive cuts
- through the trunk (about 20-24"diameter), the coloration revealed was
- just amazing -- I've nevr seen anything quite like it. ..there are
- three distinct colors besides the 'usual' white-pineish color of the
- uncolored maple, which is under the bark and towarsds the outside.
- the colored/stained/spalded section is as much as 50% of some of the
- cross-sections, and is comprised of a buckskin tan, a darker, light-
- chocolate brown, and a thin, brownish-black line that defines the edges
- of the four (3 + base) shades, which I presume is the locus of the active
- part of the fungus infection. the 'marbling' effect is just drop-dead gorgeous.
-
- I'm really looking forward to opening some of this color up on my lathe
- (unkown manufacturer, may be craftsman, but it works -- and I've got a
- set of freud turning chisels), but I'm wondering whether to let the wood
- dry first (for how many years/decades), and if so, should I paint/wax/
- varnish the ends to prevent, or at least retard, checking, or isn't this
- as much of a problem with sugar maple sections as it would be with some
- of the other hardwoods I have experience with (oak, hickory,...)??
-
- is it better to keep this wood in a cold location, or let it warm up?
- I'm currently doing to latter, since I noticed that one of the original
- six chunks had disappeared, and part of another was missing, with axe or
- hatchet marks in the end -- I guess someone decided that it would make
- serviceable firewood after all... *sigh* anyhow, I brought the remainder
- into the shop (it's not *that* warm, but enough to thaw out/warm it enough
- that sap is starting to moisten parts of all cut surfaces.
-
- should I let these sections dry, or take the suggestion of a friend and
- actually prevent them from drying (by sealing, bagging, moistening, or
- other means) until I'm ready to work on them? I'm thinking about turning
- at least some of them down to bowls, which the friend thought would be less
- apt to check, since the thin cross-section would be "more relaxed," but I'm
- somewhat skeptical and a bit leery -- I'd hate like hell to have a really
- pretty bowl almost two feet in diameter start to split/crack/check. would
- turning it 'green' and immediately coating it (?tung oil, varnish, wax, other?)
- to slow/stop the drying process be successful?
-
- also, how likely are the discolored sections to be soft to the point of
- rendering the wood difficult/impossible to work?
-
-
- any tips on turning 2' diameter bowls?
-
- feel free to email me, or follow-up, as you wish..
-
-
- bruce
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