ericdockum
Established Member
Here is my question – is it ok to put items of dried wood, (dried down to bound water only), in a microwave for short periods.? Do they heat slowly, or more quickly than wet wood?
The reasons for the question are as follows.
1) Every morning I make breakfast that includes porridge in pottery bowls heated with milk in the microwave. My wife has a carefully measured amount because of her diet, I just mix mine up by eye. I also have a bit more than she does. Both bowls go in the microwave together of 3 min 30s. As the bowls are identical and the microwave has a rotating turntable it is then hard sometimes to determine whose is which. I currently put a small plastic lid off a spice pot in next to mine so I can identify it.
Every morning I think I should turn a small set of varied pieces, sort of like chessmen size, to use as personalised markers rather than use a plastic lid. Then I wonder if it would be safe….
2) I have made a small pot for shaving soap to go along with some shaver handles and shaving brush I made. I have made it to fit the dimensions of a common brand of shaving soap refill, however it is annoying when the soap spins in the dish when you are trying to get a lather. The solution is apparently to put the pot + refill in the microwave and heat for 20-30 sec. this softens the soap so in sticks in the pot.
3) One Christmas SWMBO switched the microwave on for the Xmas pud without putting the pud in the microwave. 8 mins later the glass turntable self destructed with a bang, and the plastic rotating drive and supports all melted, which wasn’t quite the christmasy smell we were looking for. Therefore there is some SWMBO resistance to me experimenting with the replacement.
I know a microwave can be used for wood drying, but how does fully dried wood react? If it has no mobile water does it still heat significantly quickly? Charring?
I guess if wood was left in for an extended period it wood have a problem, just as the glass turntable and plastic designed into our xmas microwave did eventually.
Anyone any experience?? I am not allowed to try wood drying in our microwave............
The reasons for the question are as follows.
1) Every morning I make breakfast that includes porridge in pottery bowls heated with milk in the microwave. My wife has a carefully measured amount because of her diet, I just mix mine up by eye. I also have a bit more than she does. Both bowls go in the microwave together of 3 min 30s. As the bowls are identical and the microwave has a rotating turntable it is then hard sometimes to determine whose is which. I currently put a small plastic lid off a spice pot in next to mine so I can identify it.
Every morning I think I should turn a small set of varied pieces, sort of like chessmen size, to use as personalised markers rather than use a plastic lid. Then I wonder if it would be safe….
2) I have made a small pot for shaving soap to go along with some shaver handles and shaving brush I made. I have made it to fit the dimensions of a common brand of shaving soap refill, however it is annoying when the soap spins in the dish when you are trying to get a lather. The solution is apparently to put the pot + refill in the microwave and heat for 20-30 sec. this softens the soap so in sticks in the pot.
3) One Christmas SWMBO switched the microwave on for the Xmas pud without putting the pud in the microwave. 8 mins later the glass turntable self destructed with a bang, and the plastic rotating drive and supports all melted, which wasn’t quite the christmasy smell we were looking for. Therefore there is some SWMBO resistance to me experimenting with the replacement.
I know a microwave can be used for wood drying, but how does fully dried wood react? If it has no mobile water does it still heat significantly quickly? Charring?
I guess if wood was left in for an extended period it wood have a problem, just as the glass turntable and plastic designed into our xmas microwave did eventually.
Anyone any experience?? I am not allowed to try wood drying in our microwave............