Oryxdesign":2urcmxjr said:Jelly":2urcmxjr said:Oryxdesign":2urcmxjr said:Good luck machining greenheart! Be careful of the splinters too.
At the risk of sounding flippant:- there's no luck to it if you use appropriate tool geometries; though unless you really love sharpening, carbide tipped tooling probably wouldn't go amiss either.
I suspect you haven't machined much Greenheart but if you have and have found suitable geometry that ensures the blade doesnt' dull I'm sure Jacob will be all ears
Elm is only durable when totally immersed. Otherwise, it rots fairly quickly. And the worms love it!phil.p":1q7g9bxq said:marcros":1q7g9bxq said:Richard T":1q7g9bxq said:Elm, famously, does not rot in water. Could be cheaper.
I may be wrong but is the problem with elm the junction between air and water- where it is submerged it wont rot but where it is getting regularly wet and dry it may do. I may be thinking of something else though.
Where people get it wrong is that they read of underground drains and parts of watermills etc. that have survived centuries, but forget that these were perpetually wet. Several woods that last quite well IN water won't survive a cycle of soaking and drying out.
Phil.
Double glazing gets condensation too. In any case to double or triple glaze these windows would cost several thousands , with a very long (if ever) payback period, whereas these condensation drains will cost just tens.bugbear":e2sn87xj said:Since the condensation is simply a symptom of paid-for heat escaping through the window, a better solution would be to increase the insulation value of the window design.
BugBear
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