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It'll work.
I've made several bird houses from it and some Adirondack chairs as well that are kept outside year-round.
I like aromatic red cedar, but I don't work it anymore as I get a contact dermatitis reaction form it.
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(02-03-2017, 06:59 AM)WxMan Wrote: It'll work.
I've made several bird houses from it and some Adirondack chairs as well that are kept outside year-round.
I like aromatic red cedar, but I don't work it anymore as I get a contact dermatitis reaction form it.
Thanks for the reassurance - any concerns with glue type? I was planning on Titebond II
Rick
Rick
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You can also get western red cedar and eastern white cedar,either will work.TB III will work well.
Mel
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Aromatic cedar grows to our south and west. Have used allot of it in the past. I have some in the shop I got from from a friend but haven't built with it in years. The cedar(juniper) now is flat awful. We had called the wood supplier to order some ffr the school shop and the supplier said you really don't want it. We had them send a batch on the truck and it was all narrow stuff mainly sapwood. Told them to keep it on the truck.
If you can find some good stuff from someone who has it on their property you can find some good stuff. There is a guy that sells whole sawn logs at the weatherford monthly flea market and it wasn't bad but it was sawn way too thin. Still not the type of cedar I'm used to seeing.
Plain old glue is fine for it. It will hold up ok outside. It's the most common fence post I see anywhere.
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Western Red Cedar is BORG Cedar in the midwest, it probably varies across the US as the range of the many Cedars does. It is what I generally see as outdoor furniture, though it is mighty soft stuff (Janka hardness of 350), and hardware run through it has a tendency to wallow out the wood, making it get sloppy especially if heavier adults are using it. You can combat that by putting stainless or brass sleeves through the screw holes, and running your hardware inside of that, and using washers at each end. Aromatic is usually Eastern Red Cedar, or Aromatic Red Cedar, and is much tougher stuff with a Janka of 950. As stated it often is pretty runty in the woods, and finding stock more than 3 to 4" wide is often hard to do, or it costs a LOT. Smells great, looks great and both WRC, and ERC have good bug, and wet resistance. I have found both easy on tools, but if you are using it outdoors you want some Gorilla glue, TB III, or some Epoxy. Regular or TB II won't wear well outdoors.
Worst thing they can do is cook ya and eat ya
GW
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Today, I would use TBIII. But, having said that, all of my outdoor pieces made from aromatic red were glued using TBII. Never had a joint fail. Several of the bird houses were coopered for a round shape, so they had LOTS of glue joints. I had wood fail before the glue did; and even at that the cedar lasted outdoors in full sun, humidity, Midwest winters. The one that failed the fastest was made from western red, and it lasted 10 years. The one going the longest is still in use outside in Arkansas after 15 years. My in-laws get bluebirds nesting in it every year.
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I make bird houses out of packing crate lumber. Last at least 5 years.Not pretty but the birds don't care.
My boss is a Jewish carpenter. Our DADDY owns the business.
Trying to understand some people is like trying to pick up the clean end of a turd.
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Thanks folks - I appreciate the information
Rick
Rick
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02-04-2017, 08:04 AM
(This post was last modified: 02-04-2017, 08:05 AM by MichaelMouse.)
(02-04-2017, 06:54 AM)Rick_B Wrote: Thanks folks - I appreciate the information
Rick
As long as the water does not accumulate and remain on/in the wood, you may use anything. May weather, but will likely outlast you and I as long as it can dry.
I think insects will not be a problem on a bird feeder, merely an
hors d'oeuvre.
Better to follow the leader than the pack. Less to step in.