08-19-2017, 09:59 PM
A storm toppled a large black locust, yielding a 48-foot log, 14 inches wide at the top, 28 inches at the base. I'll cut it into 8 foot lengths and haul them to sawmill for 8/4 boards of varying widths. Looks like I'll have lots of hard, heavy, rot-resistant wood! I'm thinking of outdoor garden benches.
I air dry my wood in a shed, but my question is: Could I skip the drying process and just make benches out of the wet wood? These will be stocky benches with big mortise and tenons, adding PL Premium glue where needed. I've used PL on wet treated lumber and it makes a solid bond, so I'm guessing it would work here too.
Anyone have experience working with black locust? Does QS or PS make a difference? I've never locust lumber, but we built a long stick-style walking bridge over a gully using dry branches off the forest floor. The bridge is still solid as can be 25 years later. -- Peter
I air dry my wood in a shed, but my question is: Could I skip the drying process and just make benches out of the wet wood? These will be stocky benches with big mortise and tenons, adding PL Premium glue where needed. I've used PL on wet treated lumber and it makes a solid bond, so I'm guessing it would work here too.
Anyone have experience working with black locust? Does QS or PS make a difference? I've never locust lumber, but we built a long stick-style walking bridge over a gully using dry branches off the forest floor. The bridge is still solid as can be 25 years later. -- Peter