Rob Cheetham
Established Member
I am trying to edge joint some american white oak boards together.
Basically I planed up one face and one edge of a two pices of american white oak. Then I resawed a 10mm strip of of each piece. I then left these boards (which had one perfectly flat face each) overnight. The boards were stickered to give even air circulation. Also im pretty sure the boards were dry as they have been standing for about a year.
When I came back the next day the boards had cupped. Not majorly but enough to be frustrated. How can I stop this from happening. I want these pieces for scoll saw projects and dont want to keep planing them down to flatten them out which will result in losing thickness on the boards.
Should I be sealing the endgrain straight after cutting? If so what would be the best thing to use to seal the endgrain.
Any other tips would be greatly appreciated. Thanks
Basically I planed up one face and one edge of a two pices of american white oak. Then I resawed a 10mm strip of of each piece. I then left these boards (which had one perfectly flat face each) overnight. The boards were stickered to give even air circulation. Also im pretty sure the boards were dry as they have been standing for about a year.
When I came back the next day the boards had cupped. Not majorly but enough to be frustrated. How can I stop this from happening. I want these pieces for scoll saw projects and dont want to keep planing them down to flatten them out which will result in losing thickness on the boards.
Should I be sealing the endgrain straight after cutting? If so what would be the best thing to use to seal the endgrain.
Any other tips would be greatly appreciated. Thanks