There was a recent barn find sell off close to me, a furniture maker died 40+ years ago and his huge stock of wood were put into a barn, which now needs demolishing. I got some great pieces, including a 3M long, 1 1/2" thick and 45cm wide double-live edged slab of oak.
I could see worm holes, but it had good weight so at a very low cost I took the risk and bought it. I think I gave around £30 for it, so had it been good, it would have been the bargain of the week!
It didn't enter my workshop until after I had heavily and repeatedly treated it with a wood worm killer, despite thinking that these holes were probably long extinct.
Yesterday I started sanding it, and as soon as I touched the sides this happened:
Rotten.
To be sure I cut it in half at the 1.5M point to see the centre.
Rotten through to the core. What a pity, it would've made a great table.
To be clear, I was aware this was possible when I bought it, and am disappointed rather that heart broken! The seller let me have it cheap because he recognised the risk I was taking, and even with the loss of this piece I am still delighted with the overall cost of everything I bought from him, including 120 oak batons (coffee table leg size) and another 10 - 15 smaller (and solid!) slabs.
Hindsight is a pretty exact science, but with the weight it was i defy anyone to, hand on heart, declare that at that price they wouldn't have gambled and bought it.
The polystyrene by the way is on the bench I use my track saw on, a cheap way of not damaging the work surface.
I could see worm holes, but it had good weight so at a very low cost I took the risk and bought it. I think I gave around £30 for it, so had it been good, it would have been the bargain of the week!
It didn't enter my workshop until after I had heavily and repeatedly treated it with a wood worm killer, despite thinking that these holes were probably long extinct.
Yesterday I started sanding it, and as soon as I touched the sides this happened:
Rotten.
To be sure I cut it in half at the 1.5M point to see the centre.
Rotten through to the core. What a pity, it would've made a great table.
To be clear, I was aware this was possible when I bought it, and am disappointed rather that heart broken! The seller let me have it cheap because he recognised the risk I was taking, and even with the loss of this piece I am still delighted with the overall cost of everything I bought from him, including 120 oak batons (coffee table leg size) and another 10 - 15 smaller (and solid!) slabs.
Hindsight is a pretty exact science, but with the weight it was i defy anyone to, hand on heart, declare that at that price they wouldn't have gambled and bought it.
The polystyrene by the way is on the bench I use my track saw on, a cheap way of not damaging the work surface.