Discolouration across the grain

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marcus

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OK, I've just been sanding some oak which revealed on several pieces dark discoloration which runs across the grain with a clearly defined, slightly darker edge:

defect.jpg


It goes deep - I planed as much as I dared without affecting it at all....

Any ideas how it got there, and if there's any way to remove or at least disguise it somewhat - oxalic acid?

I really don't want to have to bin these pieces - the timber all comes from one tree and is perfectly matched - and I don't have any more :(

Cheers

Marcus
 
If it weren't such a straight line, I'd suggest that it was an effect of damp getting in to the end grain. Other thought - was the darker bit exposed in some way that the rest was not? If it was, in somewhere with ammonia around (stable?) it could be a sort of fuming?
 
Looks like the end has been dipped in water ? Isn't it Oxalic Acid in these cases?

Can't you work around it?
 
My first thought was that it had been in water at some point, although I'd be a little surprised as it came from a reputable supplier, and has been indoors ever since. Now that the initial panic has worn off I've found an off-cut with the same stain so will give oxalic a go on that....

Marcus
 
I think it's sticker stain from the sticks separating boards during the drying process. You could indeed try bleaching it with oxalic acid.
 
I'd go along with Chris, water stain from drying or stickering. Maple is very prone to this and the stains can go very deep, you either live with it as a feature or get a new piece of wood
 
I have had this on Oak, and as you sat goes a long way inside. Mine however was much wider than a typical stick.
 
I suspect the staining can migrate preferentially along the grain a little like spalting does. Having said that, I wonder how the tyloses in oak affect that?
 
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