custard
Established Member
Does anyone know anything about heat treated timber, the kind where the wood is kilned at about 200 degrees c?
In the UK I've only ever seen it used for external timbers, to prevent rot. But I seem to recall that in the US it's used much more widely, including on furniture woods, I vaguely recall that the benefit is supposed to be extreme stability?
I've been offered some rippled Sycamore that's been heat treated,
There's a wide colour variation as you can see from these photos. I'd have expected the wood to be very brittle, especially as the ripple figure is so pronounced, but these sample boards came through my planer thicknesser as clean as a whistle with almost no tear out. The wood definitely smells "smokey", in fact after just a couple of boards the workshop smells as if there's been a barbecue in there!
The price isn't too bad, so if it's true that you can treat the timber almost like ply or MDF in terms of its dimensional stability, then why isn't it more widely used? I know chocolate coloured Sycamore comes as a bit of a shock, but I guess you could get used to it!
I'm interested because there's a design I'd like to make, with lots of large textural beading cut into wide, curved drawer fronts, but the stability issue means it's a tricky and expensive lamination job unless something like this is viable so it could be made from the solid.
Could anyone recommend a US woodworking forum where I might find makers more familiar with this material?
In the UK I've only ever seen it used for external timbers, to prevent rot. But I seem to recall that in the US it's used much more widely, including on furniture woods, I vaguely recall that the benefit is supposed to be extreme stability?
I've been offered some rippled Sycamore that's been heat treated,
There's a wide colour variation as you can see from these photos. I'd have expected the wood to be very brittle, especially as the ripple figure is so pronounced, but these sample boards came through my planer thicknesser as clean as a whistle with almost no tear out. The wood definitely smells "smokey", in fact after just a couple of boards the workshop smells as if there's been a barbecue in there!
The price isn't too bad, so if it's true that you can treat the timber almost like ply or MDF in terms of its dimensional stability, then why isn't it more widely used? I know chocolate coloured Sycamore comes as a bit of a shock, but I guess you could get used to it!
I'm interested because there's a design I'd like to make, with lots of large textural beading cut into wide, curved drawer fronts, but the stability issue means it's a tricky and expensive lamination job unless something like this is viable so it could be made from the solid.
Could anyone recommend a US woodworking forum where I might find makers more familiar with this material?