Plumberpete
Established Member
Sgian Dubh":2cfahn0q said:It's got to be a stretch of imagination to suggest that drying wood, any species, somehow causes the cell structure to become more widely spaced. For the cell structure to become more widely spaced indicates that somehow the links that hold the cells together loosen causing the cells to be move apart somewhat. What happens as wood dries is the cell walls distort, and the drier the wood the more they distort. As the cell walls lose moisture below fibre saturation point they shrink and buckle and this tends to reduce the volume of each cell's lumen. Indeed, the warping that occurs in wood as it dries is because of shrinkage and distortion of all the cell walls, with the greatest shrinkage (in all species) following the same direction as the roughly circular growth rings. Slainte.Plumberpete":2cfahn0q said:As has been discussed elsewhere on this thread, steam drying the timber reduces moisture content more-so than airdrying making it marginally lighter in weight and therefore the cell structure more widely spaced (hence spongy).
You have put it in much better words than I ever could. Thank you!