I'm making a simple lathe stand and trying to use up some new oak sleepers left over from a garden project. The stand is basically a big saw horse with some additional bracing between the legs.
I've dimensioned the oak but some of it has some very bad shakes, I've attached photos to give some idea, these bits are to form the legs. I can squeeze the shakes together using a clamp so have glued and clamped them to see how it turns out. I'm also thinking of gluing several dowels through them, I'm not worried how it looks as long as its strong. However, my gut is telling me this is really firewood.
Any thoughts?
Richard
Hi..You haven't mentioned the Lathe details..(timber turning? or steel?..weight... length) which Mike and others thought about. Ideally the bed for a lathe will be quarter-sawn seasoned hardwood wood. The legs of course have to provide stability and not get in the way. One looks for perfect horizontal, no twist no stress and ideally a tray, say 1/8th inch for the lathe.
The timber you have isn't too bad even for a bed however when cramping and gluing my (i.e. personal) approach would be to 'only just' cramp the wood so the timber doesn't want to spring when you release the cramps. Sure you could fill the gaps with say horse-hoof glue and maybe even similar timber sawdust or even resin but I'd be looking for stability in my local seasons.
Another approach with the gluing, if for a bed, would be to recess and pin (say 5/16th set bolts, not set screws to bind the the crack with just enough tension to 'bite' after filling the crack with glue but not close the gap. The recess on either side would be enough to hide the hex head (I wouldn't use a coach bolt) and the nut and thread...no protrusions.
If the crack/s is/are in the legs some good 'wrigglers' which are not so deep as to bind and end up being really belted-in might be an ideal stabiliser.
If your timber is for legs I'd also be looking how I was going to truss it all together so as to have it work itself in a stable way as the timber expands and contracts.
I personally prefer steel for lathe benches but topped-with as said quarter-sawn (say 4-6 inches thick) reliable hardwood (not cedar..too expensive) such as spotted gum, good oak, beech or even chestnut if close grained (Maybe Maple of Cherry?...never used Cherry but...??)...You need of course a sawmill or provider where 'seasoned quarter sawn hardwood ' is clearly understood and that's with what you end-up. Some older wood blokes will understand very quickly if you describe the end use...
Others of course may disagree...what do you think of my suggestions Mike?