Video 2 Hardwood Identification

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024

Комментарии • 46

  • @H0peAnL0ve
    @H0peAnL0ve 5 лет назад +63

    1:30 Poplar
    2:29 Birch
    3:53 Alder
    4:55 Red Oak
    6:00 Whit Oak
    7:30 Maple
    9:03 Cherry
    10:23 Douglas Fir
    12:40 Walnut
    13:35 Philippine Mahogany
    15:13 African Mahogany
    16:43 South American Mahogany
    17:34 Wenge
    18:29 Teak
    19:24 Koa

  • @matthewsielski9805
    @matthewsielski9805 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great video. 2023 here for those prices tho

  • @Chris-qf9qm
    @Chris-qf9qm 2 года назад +2

    Wish I could get those prices today

  • @mtmals9786
    @mtmals9786 6 лет назад +5

    Be nice to have a downloadable photo app to scroll through an my tablet when searching through piles of fire wood and chopped trees. Nice feature... thanks.

  • @leek988
    @leek988 4 года назад +3

    Thank you! This is very interesting, and so well done!

  • @brainsmith9827
    @brainsmith9827 5 лет назад

    Great information, the prices are helpful if for nothing else it can be used as a historical price control, and also help me decide how valuable I want to make that nut cracker bowl I always wanted. Thanks keep them coming.

  • @flutterbydragonfly
    @flutterbydragonfly 5 лет назад

    I thank you for this video. I am trying to identify the wood in a mid century modern shelves that I found at an estate sale. It's made out of the most beautiful wood I've ever seen. I believe the unit is made out of the last type that you featured.

  • @dianes4858
    @dianes4858 4 года назад

    Thanks for your video. I am refinishing an old cabinet and I’m trying to figure out what kind of wood it is. Still don’t know, but your video gave me more information. Thanks again.

  • @NMranchhand
    @NMranchhand 6 лет назад +1

    That was a very useful and entertaining presentation. Thank you. I appreciate the pricing information as it will remain true, one species relative to another. The specific cost at a given time is unimportant. I especially enjoyed the notes on non-furniture uses.

    • @glenmartin629
      @glenmartin629  6 лет назад

      Thanks for your nice comments. Hard to keep up with prices changes but they are easy to find out by calling local suppliers.

  • @anyhoot47
    @anyhoot47 4 года назад +2

    Good info. As for guitar woods, acoustic and electric can vary depending on individual taste. I currently use a Sepele acoustic that sounds beautiful. However, the more common woods would be mohagany sides and back with a Sitca Spruce top. I prefer Adirondack Spruce for a top.
    Electric is a whole other story. Currently I use a mohagany Les Paul that has the classic Gibson sound. Also, I use a Stratocaster with an ash body (also called swamp ash or lite ash). The Stratocaster also has a birdseye maple neck and fretboard. In the past I've played an eastern rock maple guitar that was loaded with sustain.
    You could could quite literally do a series of videos on woods used for guitars and other musical instruments. As a guitar player I value the knowledge of those that work with wood. Again, good info and good examples of woods.

  • @kookoo8635
    @kookoo8635 2 года назад

    Thanks a lot for this very informative video. 👍

  • @123halarty
    @123halarty 5 лет назад +1

    Very informative,thanks

  • @conscience-commenter
    @conscience-commenter 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for that interesting ID lesson Glen . Can you do one on ebony varieties because the internet has them all screwed up ?

  • @barbarianblood2316
    @barbarianblood2316 3 года назад

    This was great! Thanks for sharing✌️

    • @glenmartin629
      @glenmartin629  3 года назад +1

      thanks for the compliment. It's a little old when it comes to the prices by the way.

    • @barbarianblood2316
      @barbarianblood2316 3 года назад

      @@glenmartin629 I figured. Quite informative though. I’m building with mystery woods sometimes, this broke it down very nicely. Thanks again✌️

  • @cruzanmongoose
    @cruzanmongoose 5 лет назад +1

    I live in ST Croix US VI and we have south American Honduras and Cuban mahogany, aka west Indian mahogany.. It ranges in price from 25 to 30 dollars a board foot. I have a mill and those are the only two woods I mill.. I built all my windows, doors, furniture, kitchen with it.. the west Indian mahogany is way better than the south American mahogany, and can be up to 3 times heavier than the Honduras mahogany growing in South America, and is way better on the weathering rot resistance than the South American mahogany.. It's because of the climate here in the Caribbean is drier, the trees are stressed and are slower growing here making for more dense form of mahogany. I've had boards sitting on the ground for ten years in direct weather and one or two passes through a planer and it's like new.. really great wood definitely one of the best..

    • @glenmartin629
      @glenmartin629  5 лет назад

      cruzan mongoose Thanks for the information

    • @jamesdarnell8568
      @jamesdarnell8568 4 года назад

      Wow! Wood is expensive when you live on an island.

  • @BobbyBaloney
    @BobbyBaloney 7 лет назад

    Extremely interesting. Thanks for sharing that knowledge

    • @bobbg9041
      @bobbg9041 3 года назад

      Search wood charts. Youll find a bunch of them online

  • @maryamtaimur1545
    @maryamtaimur1545 5 лет назад +1

    We want more videos from you .... teach us carpentry please

  • @dreamcatcher6910
    @dreamcatcher6910 7 лет назад +1

    mahogany wood wow love that stuff

  • @cuneytcagdas1775
    @cuneytcagdas1775 3 года назад

    Very helpfull explanations thank you. I want to manufacture my own drums sticks with ash wood,because in my country its impossible to find hickory and less dried oak wood but i can find heavy weight ash's wood.can you suggest to make drums sticks from ash wood?

    • @glenmartin629
      @glenmartin629  3 года назад +1

      I think it would be worth a try. We make baseball bats out of ash so a drum stick should take the same forces pretty well.

    • @cuneytcagdas1775
      @cuneytcagdas1775 3 года назад

      @@glenmartin629 thank you so much

  • @ianpartak6704
    @ianpartak6704 Год назад

    You are confusing your poplars. The wood you show and the leaf you show are from tulip poplar (not a true poplar but a magnolia; liriodendron tulipifera)
    Tulip poplar is not related to aspen or cottonwood, the true poplars, (genus name Populus) true poplars are also used for similar purposes with soft, light wood further adding to the confusion.

  • @juancarlosmartinezyanez5040
    @juancarlosmartinezyanez5040 6 месяцев назад +1

    Tarea #6

  • @Annunaki_0517
    @Annunaki_0517 6 лет назад +1

    I think the expression that something is “cherry” refers to the object described being “as new” or “unspoiled”, as in virginal. I don’t think it is related to the characteristics of Cherry wood.

    • @prepperjonpnw6482
      @prepperjonpnw6482 5 лет назад +2

      So why would those things be called cherry? Why are things that are new or unspoiled or virginal referred to as being “cherry”? It must be linked to either the cherry fruit or the tree itself otherwise it wouldn’t be referred to as being “cherry”.

  • @carbonitegamorrean8368
    @carbonitegamorrean8368 7 лет назад +3

    Thank you.

  • @justinthomas2961
    @justinthomas2961 7 лет назад +4

    Would you be willing to share the actual presentation somehow?

    • @glenmartin629
      @glenmartin629  7 лет назад +4

      You're welcome to use it as it's not set up as private. Just give credit to Green River College Carpentry Technology program Auburn Wa.

  • @FALL3Nx3MPIR3
    @FALL3Nx3MPIR3 3 года назад

    Dang, walnut is now $12.66 today...

  • @crocsonletsgo9665
    @crocsonletsgo9665 5 лет назад +1

    Pine is my favorite. Did i miss that part?

  • @bobbg9041
    @bobbg9041 3 года назад

    Wood ya send me your koa scraps.

  • @killersugar6816
    @killersugar6816 3 года назад

    That’s not true poplar, that’s the tulip tree.

  • @420jacksonian
    @420jacksonian 2 года назад

    you forgot balsa

  • @adridcc
    @adridcc Год назад

    This was a great video. Thanks. I found a playlist showing how to identify wood by looking at the end grain. It might help other woodworkers. ruclips.net/p/PLMVjQeszKDAwAuEqT8GzG24F2k5D0AB3v