Ttrees
Iroko loco!
Hello Steliz
I have been collecting and working on reclaimed hardwoods exclusively for the last few years...
Mainly exterior doors, frames and windows, have some odd planks from hotels, houses and pubs too
Mainly all the timber I get is Iroko, the other common hardwood species found is Meranti, the softer, and redder of the bunch.
This is 99 percent the door and window species I find, although I have stumbled across Afrormosia before, in a really old building in town, this stuff is uncommon though.
You don't need a thicknesser or a planer.
Even if I had one, I would be hand planing the varnish and crud off first.
I suggest you get a metal detector wand for the job, absolute LIFESAVER 8) DAMHIK.
Take a single cut file to the back of an ol hardpoint saw, it will scrape the cement off (cement is no friend of the cap iron)
Get a cheap old plane for the rough stuff, and a nice Stanley no. 5 1/2 for the rest.
Here is an example of what I have ...
Bring a saw with you always, look at flats around town where front doors keep getting broken into
Look in hotels and pubs, getting reno jobs, look in the dump ,
Bring a composite smooth fire door home for planing on,
Look at window and door manufacturers for their skip.
Nothings too small, Titebond is class
It's always worth it bring it home
Theirs blood on this resource as far as I'm concerned, Iroko might not be so plentiful
in a few years
The hand plane is truly the most joyful tool to uncover the beauty of the timber underneath the flaky layers of paint.
Watch out for lead dust in the old paint (they say?)
Good luck
Tom
I have been collecting and working on reclaimed hardwoods exclusively for the last few years...
Mainly exterior doors, frames and windows, have some odd planks from hotels, houses and pubs too
Mainly all the timber I get is Iroko, the other common hardwood species found is Meranti, the softer, and redder of the bunch.
This is 99 percent the door and window species I find, although I have stumbled across Afrormosia before, in a really old building in town, this stuff is uncommon though.
You don't need a thicknesser or a planer.
Even if I had one, I would be hand planing the varnish and crud off first.
I suggest you get a metal detector wand for the job, absolute LIFESAVER 8) DAMHIK.
Take a single cut file to the back of an ol hardpoint saw, it will scrape the cement off (cement is no friend of the cap iron)
Get a cheap old plane for the rough stuff, and a nice Stanley no. 5 1/2 for the rest.
Here is an example of what I have ...
Bring a saw with you always, look at flats around town where front doors keep getting broken into
Look in hotels and pubs, getting reno jobs, look in the dump ,
Bring a composite smooth fire door home for planing on,
Look at window and door manufacturers for their skip.
Nothings too small, Titebond is class
It's always worth it bring it home
Theirs blood on this resource as far as I'm concerned, Iroko might not be so plentiful
in a few years
The hand plane is truly the most joyful tool to uncover the beauty of the timber underneath the flaky layers of paint.
Watch out for lead dust in the old paint (they say?)
Good luck
Tom