jrc
Member
After 15 years of turning pens I'm thinking about stabilizing my best woods, I only use local Vermont hardwoods. What woods works best and is there woods you can not stabilize? I know you can not with dense woods like rosewood.
I have a piece of sugar maple that was cut a week ago and cut it into 7/8" X 7/8" strips and very wet. Normally I let them set for a couple months and then cut them blank size and let them set another few weeks. I check them by drilling for the tube and wait a week to see if the tube slides easy. If it does the wood is ready to use.
I would like to know if anyone here has put fresh cut wood in a vacuum to pull out some of the moisture to speed up the drying process?
I have a piece of sugar maple that was cut a week ago and cut it into 7/8" X 7/8" strips and very wet. Normally I let them set for a couple months and then cut them blank size and let them set another few weeks. I check them by drilling for the tube and wait a week to see if the tube slides easy. If it does the wood is ready to use.
I would like to know if anyone here has put fresh cut wood in a vacuum to pull out some of the moisture to speed up the drying process?