Kicked Back
Established Member
I wanted to batch make a bunch of table saw runners for various jigs out of some maple. I thicknessed some maple down to the same width as the mitre slots using a drum sander, everything was perfect, the wood stayed completely true. I start ripping a bunch of strips off on the table saw, about 5mm at a time. Banana. Banana. Banana. Meanwhile the original/non-offcut stayed true...
I all too familiar with internal stresses within the wood getting released upon machining, but what I'm less clear on is what actually causes it and whether some movement shouldn't be unexpected or if I'm just unlucky.
Googling anything to do with reaction wood/case hardening etc. always leads to a bunch of forum posts with folks saying the wood isn't dry/wasn't dried properly. I'm lucky enough to have a Wagner moisture meter and always confirm everything is dry upon purchase (~12-15% MC) and everything is stored in a fully insulated, dry workshop with plenty of time to acclimatise. Besides, the movement is instant rather than something that happens over days. Not like it's moisture redistributing in that timeframe.
Timber usually bought from (what I hope is) a reputable supplier (Timbersource).
Although I'm writing this post now, I've had this happen with maple, beach, ash and sapele (with its seemingly nice straight grain).
What I really want to know is: are all the various forum posts acting like this is a rare event just typical internet nonsense? How often does this happen in your work?
I all too familiar with internal stresses within the wood getting released upon machining, but what I'm less clear on is what actually causes it and whether some movement shouldn't be unexpected or if I'm just unlucky.
Googling anything to do with reaction wood/case hardening etc. always leads to a bunch of forum posts with folks saying the wood isn't dry/wasn't dried properly. I'm lucky enough to have a Wagner moisture meter and always confirm everything is dry upon purchase (~12-15% MC) and everything is stored in a fully insulated, dry workshop with plenty of time to acclimatise. Besides, the movement is instant rather than something that happens over days. Not like it's moisture redistributing in that timeframe.
Timber usually bought from (what I hope is) a reputable supplier (Timbersource).
Although I'm writing this post now, I've had this happen with maple, beach, ash and sapele (with its seemingly nice straight grain).
What I really want to know is: are all the various forum posts acting like this is a rare event just typical internet nonsense? How often does this happen in your work?