Needs Pictures: 0
Picture(s) thanks: 0
Results 1 to 6 of 6
Thread: Steam Bending camphor laurel
-
30th May 2014, 07:01 PM #1... and this too shall pass away ...
- Join Date
- May 2012
- Location
- Brisbane (Chermside)
- Age
- 71
- Posts
- 2,076
Steam Bending camphor laurel
Can anyone help me understand how good or bad camphor is for steam bending?
Bootle does not mention steam bending for camphor. I found precious little on the web, so here I am, asking for advice.
Thanks,
John
-
30th May 2014 07:01 PM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
- Join Date
- Always
- Location
- Advertising world
- Age
- 2010
- Posts
- Many
-
31st May 2014, 12:56 AM #2SENIOR MEMBER
- Join Date
- May 2009
- Location
- Coffs Coast
- Posts
- 141
Bloody awful. Grain runout means a nice big pile o kindling by the end of the day. Straight grain is critical. That is very rare in camphour.
-
31st May 2014, 05:14 AM #3
As all timbers bend. I think it depends on how much of a bend your after. I've made camphor bend just enough for what I wanted once.
From my experience in some soft timbers, its not the runout thats the biggest problem, its its ability to compress evenly on the inside of the bend. ie. no compression failure. ie. visual compressed points on the inside of the bend. A compression failure in a soft timber can't be ignored.
-
31st May 2014, 12:29 PM #4... and this too shall pass away ...
- Join Date
- May 2012
- Location
- Brisbane (Chermside)
- Age
- 71
- Posts
- 2,076
Thanks guys,
I think my best bet is to build a steamer and test a couple of pieces.
The good news is that I have some nice straight grained camphor laurel on hand. What I am doing is putting a twist of about 25-30 degrees in a board that will be the sides of the back of a chair, to allow for the bend in the back rest. So it is not a severe bend.
I note on youtube that some blokes deliberately over-bend the wood a bit, then remove it from the former and put it in a frame that holds it in the finished shape as it dries. If that reduces spring-back, it sounds like a good idea.
All will be revealed in the fullness of time.
Cheerio!
John
-
14th June 2014, 04:04 PM #5
Hi John, I've been trialling different timbers to steam bend over in the CHAIR DESIGN 101 thread so I threw in a couple of pieces of camphor laurel today to save you some grief!
In short...
- the cross section was 10 x 25 mm
- steamed for an hour
- bent in a fairly gentle double bend former
- 15 minutes in bending former before ....
- moved to drying former for an hour ... so far
20140614_132216.jpg
20140614_132153.jpg
Results
- bent easily
- no cracking on compression nor tension sides (but it IS a small section?)
- very pliable in the bend and I doubt twisting would be a problem
flettya rock is an obsolete tool ......... until you don’t have a hammer!
-
15th June 2014, 12:46 PM #6... and this too shall pass away ...
- Join Date
- May 2012
- Location
- Brisbane (Chermside)
- Age
- 71
- Posts
- 2,076
Similar Threads
-
Steam bending (again)
By Arron in forum WOODWORK - GENERALReplies: 40Last Post: 6th October 2011, 04:00 PM -
Steam bending ply
By pippa_21 in forum WOODWORK - GENERALReplies: 9Last Post: 18th January 2008, 06:50 PM -
Steam bending
By Bob Hall in forum WOODWORK - GENERALReplies: 0Last Post: 18th September 2007, 06:08 PM -
Steam bending yet again
By Arron in forum WOODWORK - GENERALReplies: 5Last Post: 19th March 2004, 11:22 AM -
Steam bending.
By RETIRED in forum TIMBERReplies: 5Last Post: 25th June 2001, 10:00 PM