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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    Melbourne, Aus.
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    12,746

    Default Red Oak score ... drying and turning tips?

    Half a Red Oak came down in Melb a couple of days ago and Thumbsucker contacted me about collecting it.

    Trunk was oval, about 60 x 40 cm. Lot of it is sapwood.

    We got a bunch of crotch pieces out of it and a few slabs for TS to dry. The slabs we split with wedges ... TS had been reading up on technique.

    So if anyone has experience with this stuff, is it as unstable as English Oak to dry? Any tips on turning the stuff?

    Here's a pic of TS most of the way through the first split. The log is a metre long.

    We lost a bit of fluid doing it the old-fashioned way
    Cheers, Ern

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  3. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
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    Oberon, NSW
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    Default

    I have a fair bit of Red Oak (well... had. "Lost" it during the move) and I found it to be fairly stable during drying.

    I didn't get my hands on it 'til about a fortnight after 'twas lopped and it had only started checking in the heart. I simply used wedges in the existing checks to break it down and threw it straight into my woodpile as I'd run out of end-grain sealer. 'Twas another week or so before I sealed it.

    Mind you, this would've been late Autumn/early Winter (I think) so that probably made a difference... but it has showed no problems in the years since.

    I haven't turned any yet... I still have a couple of 16"sqx6"(ish) pieces that must be just about ready.
    I may be weird, but I'm saving up to become eccentric.

    - Andy Mc

  4. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    Melbourne, Aus.
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    Default

    Thanks Skew.

    This stuff has started end-grain checking in the last few days since the fall. Course it's been pretty warm.

    I understand there's a view that the best time to drop a tree for w/w is late winter since the moisture levels are lowest then. On the other hand, ambient moisture hasn't exactly been high over the last couple of months.
    Cheers, Ern

  5. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Lake Seminole, Georgia USA
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    79
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    1,111

    Default

    Hi Ern,
    I reckon you will enjoy turning the Red Oak a good bit, if it is anything like ours. The bark seems to stay attached pretty well (if you want bark), and thin CA locks it on well if needed. Good luck with it.
    This little hollow form, with a square built into it, is turned from green Red Oak, and the pith is running side-to-side through it. The walls are about 2.5mm thick, and it is fully dry now with no cracks. The collar does not fit the hollow form curve very well, but it did fit OK before it dried. I need a bit more patients.

    -- Wood Listener--

  6. #5
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    Jan 2002
    Location
    Melbourne, Aus.
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    12,746

    Default

    Thanks Gil.

    Schmick piece!

    ... grain looks similar so we might be on the same page.

    Thanks for the CA tip.
    Cheers, Ern

  7. #6
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    North of the coathanger, Sydney
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    68
    Posts
    9,417

    Default

    What was the temperature? TS wearing long sleeves and what looks like a heavy cotton shirt - can see why lost a bit of fluid
    - but easily replaced
    regards
    Nick
    veni, vidi,
    tornavi
    Without wood it's just ...

  8. #7
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    Earth
    Posts
    3,567

    Default

    I am glad to hear that is relatively stable.

    Using the wedges was very informative, and lots of fun, even if it was hard work. It was also reasonable fast. I suspect with practice you could process a good size tree in a few hours.

    I have sealed my pieces with some oil paints and look ward to working with it.

    No just waiting to see if the council takes down the rest of the tree. The piece we collected was a one half of a fork in the tree.

  9. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    1,133

    Default

    I think this might be red oak...

    Looks a bit like english oak but is easier to turn. I got my piece already dry.

    Sanding is still a little tedious IMO



    Cheers,

    Chipman

  10. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Tallahassee FL USA
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    Default

    This one was was red oak: http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com...ad.php?t=86136
    It's probably similar to Gil's red oak, but maybe the finish is different enough. I'm told there are 400 species of oak worldwide, and 25 in Florida alone. They propagate by airborne pollination, with all the discipline of a fratority toga party.

    I recently felled a red oak in my yard, and I'm self-administering some "learning opportunities" in the form of cross-grain donuts from the pith for a proposed project (I'll only use the long-grain quadrants). I've turned only a few of them, but to establish procedures I'm doing some practice on kiln-dried pine or such. They both seem to exhibit comparable ovalling, which I may be able to accommodate in the project. It's winter here, so YMMV.

    Splitting from the existing cracks is probably the best way to avoid them in the blanks for spindle work; same with other timbers. I've found paint to be inferior to wax or AnchorSeal. Re-painting occasionally might help a bit.

    Cheers,
    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

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