It has that kind of pinky nature you see in maple Ian, dont you think ?. I see where you're coming from colourwise with the ash, but the lines of the grain figuring are too light and ash is always heavily defined.Looks to be a little dark and too opened grained for either of those two, recognise it but can’t place it, at first I thought American Ash but probably not. Ian
@martin.pearson I have never used Alder but you could well be right, just looked it up online but again the images vary so much colour wise it's difficult to confirm.
Cheers
Peter
Yours could be alder although it looks quite pale compared to what I've used, which is very similar to cherry in colour.
Some wood has a wide range of colours, most have very similar structures, so being able to see the grain is important but it’s not foolproof… does it matter what it is, all the time? Often not, I’ve got some very light American white oak that’s hard to tell apart from some slightly dark
ash
I'm not sure you can rely on density. I find I can have huge variations in density when handling the same species.OK thanks a lot for the help, I'm going with Alder based on the last comment, working on the weight info at the size it is it should be around 19lb of Alder & 29lb if maple, my bathroom scales are probably not the most accurate but just weighed it on them & it comes in at about 18lb so not anywhere near heavy enough for maple.
I'm not sure you can rely on density. I find I can have huge variations in density when handling the same species.
Yes, when dry. I use mostly Douglas fir, french sweet chestnut, eastern European oak and poplar. I sometimes find myself picking the heavier denser pieces where more strength is required. I've never calculated the difference but I would have thought up to 30% or 40% difference.Something I didn't think to ask when Triton posted was if those figures given were for green or dried wood as moisture content will surely make a difference to actual weight. Are the differences you find with wood at the same sort of moisture content?
I have what the building trade sell as mahogany, unit next to mine at one time was a Window Company & they use to have a skip outside that I would raid, the new stuff that they would throw in was very light so not very dense at all but some of the old stuff they removed from houses was really heavy even though these were both suppose to be mahogany. One of the fitters said to me that the stuff they were ripping out was far better quality than the stuff they were replacing it with.
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