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Get whatever boards out of that you can. I love red gum wood. Turning blanks also. Beautiful and very colorful.
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No advise on what to do but I'm impressed that it's 18" diameter and only 26 years old. The growth rings will be huge. Hard to imagine it would be very stable as lumber, but I know nothing about red gum.
John
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Sweetgum qualities Some gum is awesome to look at I would want to crack it open to see what it looks like inside
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GW
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If you have the capability to mill it yourself, go ahead. It is, after all, almost free wood. If you have to pay to have it milled, I would suggest you pass.
Sweetgum is best quartersawn but 18" diameter is not really big enough to QS. The boards would all be very narrow. Also, it won't have much, if any, of the red heartwood like was pictured at the Hobbit House site. I expect most of it will be a very bland cream color which will turn gray as it dries. Flat sawn board will move a LOT while drying.
BTW, the stuff is nearly impossible to split, too, even with a hydraulic splitter.
If I had 8 hours to cut down a tree, I'd do it in 15 minutes with a chainsaw and drink beer the other 7:45 hrs.
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Ah yes, sweet gum. Good shade tree and fast growing, but as you say, it makes quite a mess in the yard.
You've been given good advice about the properties of this wood. It does want to warp a lot while drying. Milling oversized is a good idea. Do what you can to weight down the stack once you have it stickered. It's also pretty rot-prone, so keep it out of the elements while it dries.
Once dry, it can be quite pretty, and I find it easy to work.
Steve S.
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