About three months ago I bought a board of American poplar (tulipwood) and had it cut into 1 m lengths at the timber yard. Then it sat in my workshop. At the weekend I flattened one face and one edge of each piece so I could run them through my new bandsaw to get to a bit more than final thickness. Then it was a matter of planing down the newly sawn side and squaring up the other edge and the ends. The original board was fairly straight grained, had very little wind and a normal degree of cupping. Therefore the work was done quickly.
However, within half an hour of coming off the bandsaw, the cupping returned to the pieces. Am I right in thinking that this can only be due to stresses being relieved by the bandsaw cut? Given the amount of time it takes wood to dry out and given that there have been no sudden humidity changes over the last few days, I'm inclined to think that changing moisture content can't be at the root of this.
I don't anticipate this leading to problems and I intend to give the pieces about a fortnight to settle and then re-establish square and quickly get the dovetailing done before any further movement can occur. Is this a sensible course of action?
However, within half an hour of coming off the bandsaw, the cupping returned to the pieces. Am I right in thinking that this can only be due to stresses being relieved by the bandsaw cut? Given the amount of time it takes wood to dry out and given that there have been no sudden humidity changes over the last few days, I'm inclined to think that changing moisture content can't be at the root of this.
I don't anticipate this leading to problems and I intend to give the pieces about a fortnight to settle and then re-establish square and quickly get the dovetailing done before any further movement can occur. Is this a sensible course of action?