JakeS":2gkqyhr3 said:
Sgian Dubh":2gkqyhr3 said:
more air space than wood tissue
Presumably the distinction is that it's measuring what percentage of water there is
compared to the amount of wood, rather than an MC measurement being a percentage of how much of the
total volume is water?
Something like that. I think I would rephrase what you've said thus: within the shell that the piece of wood occupies it's defining the amount of water there is
compared to the amount of wood, expressed as a percentage.
For example, if you take a block of wood that occupies a space of one square foot, and within that square foot space the voids amount to three quarters of the volume then the wood fibres only occupy one quarter of it.
To calculate the moisture content of wood you need to know the following information:
• Initial wet weight of the sample, (WW)
• Oven dry weight, (ODW)
The sum to calculate the moisture content percentage is below, where WW is Wet Weight of the sample, and ODW stands for the wood sample’s Oven Dry Weight:
MC% = ((WW – ODW) / ODW) X 100
For example,
• Wet Weight = 247 grammes
• Oven Dry Weight = 183 grammes
Calculate, ((247 – 183)/183) X 100 = 34.97%MC, or 35% to the nearest half a percent.
It's important to understand what the formula above calculates: it uses the weight of completely dry wood as the base weight and figures how much extra weight is the result of the water in it, and what percentage this water forms over the dry wood base weight. Slainte.