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Thread: Water Soaking Rough-outs
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21st September 2008, 10:50 AM #1
Water Soaking Rough-outs
Well, I've finally made the switch. Three weeks now. (Thanks for the info, Hughie). It got too expensive for me to keep changing out the soap solution. (Though I had really good results from it.) The rising cost of Diesel convinced me to make the change.
I have four half-drums, three in use right now. One of them is now full of roughed bowls, and some blanks in the other two just long enough to get them roughed out before they crack.
The water stinks like a sewer after about 5 days... and I change it once a week... so about half of every week it really smells bad around here.
I'll keep some records, and see what kind of results I get with the water soak.
After a month in the water, I'll remove them let them sit overnight, and then deal with the drying. I'm going to wrap some in paper bags and put on a shelf. I'll paint some end grain with sealer and put in my kilns. And some I'm going to clamp and put them in the kilns. Maybe the clamps will keep them from ovaling out so much.
Shavings are gettin' a bit much. I hauled out two of these little trailers full out of my shed after roughing those bowls.Al
Some minds are like concrete thoroughly mixed up and permanently set.
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21st September 2008, 11:28 AM #2
Yup, it works.
If you can afford the water & time, you need to change it about every 3 or 4 days.Cliff.
If you find a post of mine that is missing a pic that you'd like to see, let me know & I'll see if I can find a copy.
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21st September 2008, 11:45 AM #3
I wouldn't trust it too much I tried with fresh cut logs of white oak, mulberry, apple and maple. All split within 4 days. They were left with the bark on and no end sealer completely submerged in rain water barrels. I also have done the boiling, soap, alcohol ways and with equal failure. Maybe I shouldn't be turning wood. I think any of the quick fool proof methods depend a lot on when the tree is dropped and whether there is branch wood in the samples and who's the fool trying it. So I went back to turn and microwave and let the buggers warp. Customers seem to be OK with it and some even like the "organic" cracks when they are present
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21st September 2008, 01:55 PM #4
That often, Cliff? That will do away with the majority of the stench, but will it actually help the drying-without-cracking problem?
I think it would be easy to do, being retired I have plenty of time, and, being on the Volunteer Fire Dept., I don't have a water bill unless I go over the minimum. But think about how much time that'll take away from turning....
After thinking about it, changing it twice as much would give twice as much clean water a chance to wash out the sap, wouldn't it?Al
Some minds are like concrete thoroughly mixed up and permanently set.
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21st September 2008, 02:21 PM #5
Difficult to understand how adding more water (by soaking) to a rough turning could help it dry in any faster or less distorted fashion. An alternative would be to boil the rough turning in water for an hour or so, and then let it dry slowly by whatever procedure one likes. This is said to open some cells of the wood and release internal stress, allowing the wood to dry a bit more rapidly and with less distortion.
Richard in Wimberley
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21st September 2008, 02:59 PM #6
Al,
Good to hear from you....
Got a good mate of mine who soaks everything he turns and swears by it. He only changes the water every 3-4 weeks, after to or three soakings it becomes clear. Its about then he take em out for turning.
If you add some eucalyptus oil to your water the smell will go away, a couple of tablespoons per oil drum [44gal or 200l] This lasts for a couple of months
Texian, as to why it works, well, heres the drum on what is supposed to happen. The water displaces the resin. Hence the colour change and eventual smell. When your done, the water is clear. Then theres a few weeks.....for me around 6 weeks until its real light..........too slack to wiegh em all the time.
I dry em out in cardboard boxes....no paper bags or sacks much down under. As to warping, it kinda depends on the timber and the cut. As the timber varies so does the success rate, no doubt some will need more, some less, not too mention the season of the cutting.
In my soap drum I never change the soap, just keep adding water when it thickens too much. I figure eventually I'll have only water. I think my soap is about 2 years or so old, its had a couple shots of eucalyptus oil, around 100mls in that time.Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working. — Pablo Picasso
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21st September 2008, 05:24 PM #7Hewer of wood
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Texian, when the timber millers get their forest hardwood logs in from the mountains here in Oz, they stack the logs in big piles and set a sprinkler over them for a while.
I guess the point is to reduce the rate at which the endgrain gives up moisture in relation to something else; dunno what that might be but there are experts on this forum who might enlighten us.Cheers, Ern
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21st September 2008, 05:28 PM #8Hewer of wood
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Al, you might have to go back to work to reduce your cost of living ;-}
That's a lot of turning you're doing.
Looking forward to hearing more about the 'drying' results.Cheers, Ern
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21st September 2008, 06:45 PM #9
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21st September 2008, 10:34 PM #10
Al, let me now how that turns out, always remarkable to read all the different story's about what to do with rough turnings, one put them in a paper bag, another microwaved them, another soak them in detergenta, another seal them and let it stay on a shelf for a long time. The last does my girl penfriend Pam Reilly all the time, also Eugen Schlaak from Canada is doing the same, both having not any problem.
Time to find out what is true.
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21st September 2008, 10:43 PM #11
I had a vague recollection that the season of felling the tree was supposed to be a determinant of success/failure of induced drying. My gut feeling was that if the tree was felled after leaves were gone, it should produce easier or better drying. I browsed a couple patents I'd collected on artificial wood drying, and tired of that right quick. So I let Google [drying wood season felled] do the walking.
The question seems to be unsettled as yet. But this chapter looks like a fairly complete discussion: http://chestofbooks.com/home-improve...f-Cutting.html , noting in particular that only the sapwood is mostly affected.
I don't know how much this helps, but I've bookmarked the link for later digestion.
In any event, I don't have the patience to rough turn and wait like the pros do. My oval bowls, turned green, are partly intended to elicit remarks like "How did you do THAT?"
JoeOf course truth is stranger than fiction.
Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain
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21st September 2008, 11:09 PM #12
I use the water trick do a couple of things...
1. Wash the sap out to try to stop mould. (Particulary mango)
2. Save it from cracking til I get a chance to rough turn it.Cliff.
If you find a post of mine that is missing a pic that you'd like to see, let me know & I'll see if I can find a copy.
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22nd September 2008, 01:23 AM #13
Sealing the log ends and/or keeping logs wet to prevent end grain cracking/checking makes sense. Just difficult to understand how soaking rough turnings in water would be helpful. Might leach out some minerals I guess.
Richard in Wimberley
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22nd September 2008, 01:30 AM #14Senior Member
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RSSER I suspect the loggers use the water spray to keep the wood beetles from infesting the logs. That is common here.
As for soaking wood in containers, I realize that some of you know much more about this than I but I cannot get my head around this technique. Then again I use nothing but kiln dried materials from the start.
Very interesting
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22nd September 2008, 11:26 AM #15
Wood in its natural state in the trunk of a living tree contains from 30 to 300 percent of water, dependent largely on growth conditions and species, based on the weight of the oven dry wood. This water is contained as free water in the cell cavities and the intercellular spaces of the wood and is held as absorbed water in the capillaries of the walls of wood elements, such as fibers and ray cells. The absorbed water relates to shrinkage. When all of the free water is removed and all of the absorbed water remains, wood has reached the fiber saturation point, which is approximately 30 percent moisture content for all species. Shrinkage occurs only when the moisture content of wood is reduced to some level below the 30 percent fiber saturation point. Any piece of wood will give off to, or take on moisture from the surrounding atmosphere until the amount of moisture in the wood balances that in the atmosphere. <O</O
The moisture content of the wood at the point of balance is called the equilibrium moisture content, and is expressed as a percentage of the oven dry weight of the wood. Wood, like many other materials, shrinks as it loses moisture and swells as it absorbs moisture from the atmosphere. To further complicate the problem, wood shrinks (and swells) differently in different directions or planes. Thus, soaking in water displaces the sap, and the water has an easier time wicking out into the atmosphere, and will allow the bowl to dry a little quicker and without so much stress which causes the ovaling and cracking. <O</O
And lest you should think me smarter than I am, I copied this from the internet.<O</OAl
Some minds are like concrete thoroughly mixed up and permanently set.
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