How To Dry Oak Lumber
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- Опубликовано: 7 окт 2024
- Getting this lumber to a place where it can be dried and planed is the next step towards
some beautiful kitchen cabinets.
Video of cutting these trees down: • Harvesting Lumber From...
Video of yarding these logs: https: • Timber Into Logs
Video of the milling these logs: • Sawing Logs into Lumber
Huge thanks to Gerretsen's Building Supply and J and B Wood Products for helping us!
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Thank you, be safe, and be grateful.
Truly hard to explain a process that you have 30 years of experience in and not over explain it. Great job.
When I lived in NE PA, we harvested hickory, chestnut oak, white oak and red oak off my property. We stickered it, dried it and used it for a brand new kitchen for the wife. The chestnut oak went to become furniture and I’m holding some nice white oak for a roll top desk I want to make some day. When it’s all said and done, factoring in all costs, I’m not sure if it’s cost effective. BUT knowing where it all came does a man’s soul good. There something very gratifying about that.
must be a billion dollars worth of lumber in those sheds in the current market :). Another quality video EC
Specially oak. The cooper wood.
Thank Joe!
It took me a minute to realize what you meant. I couldn't figure out why the current market would influence the weight of the lumber. But I'm guessing you're from the UK. :)
@@inyaface07 yea i should have put dollars
Where’s the security detail 😆
I’m a lifelong woodworker… appreciate good lumber therefore…. This was a great lesson… very interesting. Thank you!
I've always wanted a forklift like those on the truck
Now I know how that fork lift unloads and loads itself on to the trailer. Pretty clever practical engineering.
And all that beautiful oak lumber. Lots of work to get to this point but think of the future Wadsworth projects!
Spider-lift or Moffet
Not too sure , thought it may have been a palfinger.
Wood is cut in quarters. You have 5/4 rough cut. The stains and such can be a plus if you like artistic attributes. Too many people want straight grain, no nots, no figure, no stains, and so on.They like Composites.
All great points!
10:36 The smell there up in the mountains, in the woods next to stacks of lumber has to be amazing. Always wanted to live in the mountains just for the smell (which I know from vacations)
Oxalic acid solution will get rid of the stains without damaging the wood fibers. Commercial products are available.
What an incredible machine that truck and forklift. Modern technology is amazing.
Not really that modern.
A joy to see so much care taken over the handling of wood. A complete contrast to the way big industry handles it. It’s going to give nice boards.
Hey Scott and Nate, congratulations on the million subs here on RUclips. Keep up the good work!
Not sure what material that RUclips button they mail you for reaching 1 million subs, but if you can forge it down into something, you should!
Cool wish I could smell it.
Great to see lumbering as a natural process. Cutting the trees, rough cut stack, and a local drying operation.
I'm watching as you guys explain stickering and sticker stains, I'll tell you, they are the bane of my woodworking existence. We have sent back thousands of board feet of premium white oak and oddly it's always white oak usually that has sticker marks. Now these aren't like water stains where it's just the surface, when these occur, the stains pull all the way through and the entire length of lumber is spoiled because it has a stripe every 12". I can't very well make a stained staircase with a permanent stripe. These are caused by using green stickers in a kiln or letting a stack queued for the kiln to sit outside in the rain and then go into a kiln when saturated. It took us months to get the mill to reorganize their processing and thankfully it wasn't just us giving them this feedback which helped a lot.
Wow! There’s obviously a need for local, experienced mills!
@@TheYaegerjeusmc it was just one mill, any other mill we used had better white oak. But at the time we had an account and it paid to use them exclusively.
do you think using stickers from the same log is the answer - or just any species but dry dry?
@@icryostorm3727 Just gotta keep it dry, it's the moisture in and around the sticker that does it in. Some mills use a different style of sticker that has air gaps to reduce sticker stains but it's just gotta be dry.
Cutting a relief groove in the stickers, I hadn’t heard that before, interesting.
It's brilliant advice!
Nifty nylon banding! West Coast is cool.Oak is a gift from God.◇St. James 1:17◇
Maybe a L shaped list (turned over) of rust proof metal would be great? I guess the lumber staks are so heavy it would get marks from the lumber
cutting relief grooves in the stickers has absolutely no effect whatsoever.
@@normandhalv any kind of steel will stain wood. There's a reason they use wood stickers.
Learned some important stacking and drying tips to apply on the next batch of lumber my saw spits out. Never even occurred to me to turn over and weight the drying lumber but it makes all the sense in the world.
If it doesn't get too personal, could you talk about your cost per board foot after all these expenses, and compare it to store-bought lumber? Might help people get more understanding of the value in DIYing something that most of us don't have the know-how or contacts to do. Thanks!
I second this! Would be really good to learn
+1
The lumber looks beautiful, hope great things are made with nature's gift.
We use that strapping for shrink wrapping sailboats in Mystic, CT. , when we're not building homes! Sir...you are a hero! god bless.
another fine production! Congratulations on 1 MILLION!!
I would love to go work with this man, seems as though he has an unlimited amount of knowledge and something about his way of speaking is pleasant.
Very interesting, was wondering if you could give us an idea what it cost for their services to dry the lumber.
You just helped me more than I could ever convey!!!! Lol I’m redoing my wood storage since the world went crazy and all, gotta repurpose more now haha thanks EC!!!
Yay!!!!
@@essentialcraftsman Haha YAY!!!! Indeed Lol 😂
As a cabinetmaker, I look forward to seeing what you end up with. Hope you can get those book matched boards reunited. Greetings from across the pond in Sydney.
Wow congrats on a million subs that's an incredible accomplishment!
Thank you for the field trip
Nice to see Ken.
Wow, I'm really looking forward to see how this small mill works
yep, agree with all that , 12/13% finish, the next issue is central heating / air con which can require lower moisture content, ideally i like to store dry timber where it will eventually live. A major issue is placing wooden furniture inside houses with too high heat or excessive aircon which can require 9% , main reason i do not like modern houses with low humidity , we did the interior for a prestige house in London UK they cranked up the temperature (80°F) and the dried timber moved, caused a real problem for us as it was a £750 000 contract, drying is important as is the final placement of the work and heating ventilation management after making and in use for the first few years, great video series though!
This was super cool! You know how you kind of know the process but not really! This was very neat! Always appreciate your content.
Great exposure to the sawmill and drying side of the wood game. Air cured leaves the wood very stable.
Bryan May, the guitarist from Queen, bough a slab of timber that came from above a 600year old fireplace. Now that is what well cured timber is. That is why his guitars sound the way they do. Instrument makers crave such things. Back in the 1950's Yamaha made lame guitars, but they went on a buying spree and secured stock from old buildings and put them in store. Now they make some of the best instruments that money can buy.
Thank you for you videos, with the years of experience you have shared, I have learnt such a lot from them by applying some of the lessons to my small building business.
Thanks guys.
Appreciate all your work.
Enjoy Elohim !
I can't wait to see it either
Far too many people do not or can not understand that a little inconvenience today can save them from a whole lot of inconvenience in the future.
Loving this content! I've always been curious about how lumber is prepared before it arrives on the shelves. Fascinating to hear they weight it down with a thick concrete slab, I'm guessing to keep the boards straight as they dry so they don't warp with humidity changes. Keep it coming!
Know how, wisdom, and an easy watch. Keep up these great videos. They are invaluable skills and life lessons.
Quote of the day:
“The rule of thumb…that we never follow is…” 😂
Blown away by an office desk without a computer on it!
Those clip boards on the wall? Thats a spread sheet!
Yea now your relying on a clipboard not to get lost. Also there was one.
@@zachv1942 digital files can get lost, deleted and ruined also
I love those piggy back forklifts, we almost always get our lumber deliveries with those riding along. The ones with the crabwalk wheels are amazing too when trying to get up a tiny Californian driveway!
I though before that these were going to be some special & fabulous pieces of lumber.
With them being professionally dried AND planed, I know for SURE these will be some very special boards that will be worth a fortune when completed!
1,000,000+ subscribers...you're a class act!
Hey Scott, I was surprised it's just a year per inch there. I guess your humility is about the same as here. I had a mill years ago, I use to paint the ends of the boards when seasoning
My bro-in-law watches you too. I explained about Ken, who I was happy to see in this episode. Sy is appreciated too.
I sure enjoy your show and love to see where I grew up. Your knowledge and advice has made RUclips so useful and pleasurable again! . Please keep it up and I will watch for more! Joe
Vertical grain Oregon white oak. My god, that must be worth a fortune at today's prices. Btw, I'm from Coos Bay. There's a great little two man mill over there called Shinglehouse Mill. Great guys. They do custom milling for special architectural requirements. Anyway, great video. Learned a lot.
Love those Signode tools!
Great vid. Just one thought I had: if having the oak sawdust on the timber is a problem, you could perhaps hit it with a leaf blower after you stack it.
Yes, essential.
Question: Couldn't you have marked the sets - ends - of the grades/matches before you stacked and wrapped? I've seen nylon strapper - cordless- that melts the bands secure. Pretty neat. What a great lumber company you have access too, and some great storage/drying tips on the stickers!
I don’t think he really started with that idea in mind just got there and figured it would be a good idea but idk
Back to the blacktop road. Nice Tom T. Hall quote.
That’s some serious boat building material!
I've worked in eastern hardwoods a lot, both furniture and flooring. My experience has been with more high production than high quality lumber. We air dried 4/4 lumber 6 months to a year outside and uncovered, usually keeping a couple million board feet staged. Then, steam kilns to 6%. We used cross slotted stickers on maple and hickory to prevent staining, but solid stickers on red and white oak. Its a pretty interesting process in my opinion.
Madrone is such a beautiful tree, I don't think I've ever seen madrone lumber
Very interesting to see how things work. Great company 👍🏻
Thanks guys!
This really is true craftsmanship.
Over in the UK we use a chemical called oxalic acid to remove those black stains from oak. Would assume you could get that or something similar in the States 🤔 congrats on the open dates for the spec house viewings btw!! If I didn't have such a large pond to cross, I'd be there for sure to have a look around!
Great job thanks for explaining the process learned a lot.
Hmm, curing madrone.
Ok, impressed.
"season" not dry but again spot on advice for how to make a premium product *THE ULTIMATE PREMIUM PRODUCT* absolutely.
Love all this foresting content! Keep up the good work!
5:26 I need to know if that computer is still functioning!! that office is a time machine
you really remind me of my science teacher mr Carroll i had in school in 2016 he was the best teacher in school and youre the best on youtube. if you ever come to the uk you guys would get on well and look alike too hahaha
Love your channel.
Very interesting! I just cut up a few 4-5" ponderosa pine slabs. I have no clue what I'll do with them. My sons will probably be laughing and cussing me after I'm dead and they have to get rid of them. Lol
I spent 5 years on a steel cut to length line, banding thousands of skids with 1 1/4in high tensile steel strapping, 30 years later I can feel the arthritis starting in my hands from bending the straps for the clips...
Mercy!
Another quality video. Has EC ever done a bad one? 🇬🇧
I want to move to Oregon and work there. I think I just want to move to Oregon. Massachusetts native over here.
Amazing video
I love this channel and all these Oregon characters and artisans that get featured on it. Such a reaffirming contrasting to other things that Oregon has come to be associated with.
Bob is an interesting guy, he should start his own RUclips channel 😂🤙 he's got a natural ability to explain intuitively like you.
That’s wicked kool I’d like to know more about the process
Hey I'm early! Great job EC. Love seeing this beautiful lumber. Can't wait to see it's final form in a few years.
Really cool set right there
Nice job 👏👍👌
Very interesting!
We haven't seen rain in Eugene for months.
If you have access to an empty, but soon to be filled grain bin you have access to a free and trouble free means of drying your lumber while knowing it will dry flat. Your rough lumber is placed on the bottom of the bin and the newly harvested grain is then pumped into the bin. The heat from the grain and the air forced by blowers into the bin will do a fine job of drying the lumber. The weight of the grain on the lumber will keep it flat. It is a poor farmer's drying kiln. A thorough sweeping and vacuuming of the bin's concrete floor is a must as is a layer of good plastic to keep the lumber from resting on the bare concrete.
5:55 now thats a workin mans shirt
Wahoo new content!!!
The strapping on your sawmill lumber is called muletape in tennessee
As long as it's not metal staining (no steel banding around oak..) and just from the tannins it should be fine. They are usually gone after surfacing. Metal stains can run quite deep.
Great video Scott.
Man your channel is awesome!
I get most of my oak lumber out of trees blown down by tornadoes or hurricanes and I paint the ends of the logs with wax impregnated paint to keep the amount of checking to a minimum. I did not see that you did this and was wondering why not.
Thanks for the lessons. Can you use dried western red cedar for stickers on 8/4 burr oak slabs?
I suspect you may be *somewhat* like me in this regard.... I'll never live long enough to learn as much as I want to about things that I am INTERESTED in!!!!
Been watching this channel since the concrete retaining wall, I got myself married, raised 2 kids, got grandkids, went to Mars n back, had my genitic code stolen by Commies, I even supported Trump.....
And yet, as I think about all of that, the one thing remains constant,
Scott, you sir are quite remarkable. Built in the Pacific Northwest, raised a man.
God bless.
how those drugs treating you?
@@isaackvasager9957 lol
@@robfoster8228 thought so
Great information thanks
Excellent
I have yet to see anything made from Arbuda. Such a beautiful tree.
Oh, and the heartwood is hot pink when you first cut it, but it dries to sort of a Western Maple color. Crazy wood stresses, tortures and contort. Hard, dense, and really takes a nice polish. Arbutus/Pacific Madrone.
David Link That same outfit, J&B Products Knows how to dry and mill Madrone. I saw an amazing floor out of Madrone and I can tell you as an experienced woodworker, that there is no wood from anywhere in the world that looks more beautiful and exotic. It was stunning! Hard to work with though. Painfully hard. It will make you cry when you get everything just right and done----and then come back in the morning---and it is all checked up. All a feller can do at that point is cry.
Yep it's one of the things I really miss about the Olympic Peninsula!
Good stuff!!
Hi Scott
If Scott walked around with one hand in his pocket and a backpack on his shoulder, he'd be Rick Steeves!
What species of wood are the stickers made of?
Seems like we are long overdue for a mail time video
The older I get, the more I see.. The more I really despise how the huge companies have been allowed to just gobble up entire industries.
What do you or anyone else reading think about getting a 3 phase electric swingblade sawmill instead of gas. I hear it’s cheaper to run and longer lasting than a gas engine. I have single phase power at my house and would put on a phase converter to run the electric sawmill and also a four sided planer/moulder.
If those stains are just tannin stains, oxalic acid will remove them quite easily.
Agreed, this isn't a big issue. Oxo will get rid of them. Either a hot water mix or a mix with methylated spirits. Remember to neutralise with a few rinses afterwards, as it can affect some finishes.
Neutralise with bicarbonate solution.
I guarantee you the dude with at least forty clipboards hung up in his office would benefit from a course in Microsoft Excel.