There's a lot of it around !
To a certain extent this came out of the Laburnum thread, but it will apply to all recovered timbers.
I understand that the pith of the timber is the core of the problem and needs to be cut out ! There is I see a thread running on creating a rip saw chain for saws which certainly will be useful.
But it is worth asking the question as to what is happening that the pith needs to be removed ? Why is that the cracking starts at the pith point - I noticed it only yesterday in some sycamore logs that had been cut some time back for the fire and I'm now looking at again for a hollow form. But then I also had access recently to some almond tree wood that sadly had been cut to fire logs - I kept a couple hopefully but they split horrendously from the outside in.
So given that some timbers we retrieve can be quite big, is splitting (saw or wedges, etc) essential, or should the pieces be cut to a twice (?) diameter length and sealed. And what about sealing split lengths ?
Thanks for any guidance
Rob
To a certain extent this came out of the Laburnum thread, but it will apply to all recovered timbers.
I understand that the pith of the timber is the core of the problem and needs to be cut out ! There is I see a thread running on creating a rip saw chain for saws which certainly will be useful.
But it is worth asking the question as to what is happening that the pith needs to be removed ? Why is that the cracking starts at the pith point - I noticed it only yesterday in some sycamore logs that had been cut some time back for the fire and I'm now looking at again for a hollow form. But then I also had access recently to some almond tree wood that sadly had been cut to fire logs - I kept a couple hopefully but they split horrendously from the outside in.
So given that some timbers we retrieve can be quite big, is splitting (saw or wedges, etc) essential, or should the pieces be cut to a twice (?) diameter length and sealed. And what about sealing split lengths ?
Thanks for any guidance
Rob