02-24-2020, 02:28 PM
Greetings,
I like to find old boards and I get more excited yet if they are quartersawn.
I am starting to plan some type of small set of bookshelves. My lumber supplies got mostly used up last year on another project, so starting fresh I like to sometimes limit myself to what newer boards I have found lately.
A nice 52" x 8" piece of 4/4 walnut was found at one antique-mall. I've got one of my less-famous Atkins later-Indy-era saws tuned up. I found it as a mediocre rip saw, but about 2 months ago I re-filed it to cross-cut, and it's got a new lease on life. Just 26 strokes sliced that walnut into 2 clean halves:
[attachment=24354]
Another antique mall had a very heavy 48" 6/4 board of "chestnut," which to me looks a lot more like oak. I test-cut a gigantic rip (to take off the nail-ridden side) with a freshly sharpened Disston D12 ripper. It didn't exactly smell like oak, didn't exactly smell like anything. But it's quartersawn and is probably oak or ash. After the manual rip, it got power-bandsawn into 6 planks.
Now, separating those 6 planks all released some energy from the board, and they're not all dead straight. In future plans (TBD) for a book-shelf, maybe I will treat those boards more like fence-posts or barrel-staves which can be "lashed" into straightness. They're not straight enough to edge-join and merge, but they're way too pretty to cut down any further. Right now, it's a "mock mockery" stage of design.
[attachment=24353]
Other lumber at my recent disposal is a giant heap of discarded oak flooring. That all had thick polyurethane "honey oak" tinting on it, which I didn't like. I started off resawing a couple boards to totally discard the finish-surface, but that was too much material loss. It turns out the No. 6 plane cleaned them up super-nice, without a whole lot of blunting effect on the blade.
[attachment=24355]
Protracted rambling and halting progress updates will follow!
I like to find old boards and I get more excited yet if they are quartersawn.
I am starting to plan some type of small set of bookshelves. My lumber supplies got mostly used up last year on another project, so starting fresh I like to sometimes limit myself to what newer boards I have found lately.
A nice 52" x 8" piece of 4/4 walnut was found at one antique-mall. I've got one of my less-famous Atkins later-Indy-era saws tuned up. I found it as a mediocre rip saw, but about 2 months ago I re-filed it to cross-cut, and it's got a new lease on life. Just 26 strokes sliced that walnut into 2 clean halves:
[attachment=24354]
Another antique mall had a very heavy 48" 6/4 board of "chestnut," which to me looks a lot more like oak. I test-cut a gigantic rip (to take off the nail-ridden side) with a freshly sharpened Disston D12 ripper. It didn't exactly smell like oak, didn't exactly smell like anything. But it's quartersawn and is probably oak or ash. After the manual rip, it got power-bandsawn into 6 planks.
Now, separating those 6 planks all released some energy from the board, and they're not all dead straight. In future plans (TBD) for a book-shelf, maybe I will treat those boards more like fence-posts or barrel-staves which can be "lashed" into straightness. They're not straight enough to edge-join and merge, but they're way too pretty to cut down any further. Right now, it's a "mock mockery" stage of design.
[attachment=24353]
Other lumber at my recent disposal is a giant heap of discarded oak flooring. That all had thick polyurethane "honey oak" tinting on it, which I didn't like. I started off resawing a couple boards to totally discard the finish-surface, but that was too much material loss. It turns out the No. 6 plane cleaned them up super-nice, without a whole lot of blunting effect on the blade.
[attachment=24355]
Protracted rambling and halting progress updates will follow!
Chris