Brmorgan
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I cut this Birch crotch out of a downed log late last Fall and it's been sitting in my driveway all winter frozen to the ground, so I decided to mill it up today.
Even though there isn't much snow left and the days have been pretty warm (+14°C here today downtown and beautifully sunny), it was still frozen down pretty hard. A quick whack with the 8lb maul fixed that. I never measured it, but I'd be guessing about 12-14" on the main trunk and 7" on the branch.
Got the 395XP w/ 33" bar rigged up and set to depth with the guide board to split it right down the center.
I was a little disappointed to be honest; I was hoping for a bit of figured wood, but there really isn't any. Just a few odd areas around some knots. Still, though, it has some nice streaking and character - the wood is bordering on going soft in a few areas though, so I'll have to take extra care working with it. You can't really tell in the picture, but the branch piece has some nice open grain and its coloring and pattern are very much like Maple rather than Birch.
Here's what I ended up with. The two largest bookmatched slabs on the right are a bit over 2" thick; not sure what I'll use them for yet, but I was thinking maybe legs for a live-edge trestle-style coffee table or something. The rest of the pieces are 1-1/8" thick. Hopefully they don't check or split too badly. I've had mixed results with older Birch like this - some dry out really nice and sound, and others have terrible ring shake and split from end to end, and it isn't a drying or stickering issue either.
Nice looking stack of wood for the little time it took! I'm going to paint the ends still, and throw a couple hundred pounds on top just to keep them nice and flat. I really like the streaked coloring though. I'd have rather found a bunch of spalted and figured wood, but hey, they can't all be diamonds. I deliberately dropped that tree in a wet area two years ago to see if it would go spalted, but no such luck. There are hints of it here and there, but I think by the time it progressed much farther the wood would be too far gone to be of use.
It probably took me less than 45 minutes to mill this out. The saw was cutting really nicely, and it doesn't take too long to set up on short blocks like this. No wedging and/or leveling the guide!
There's still a fair amount of this log out on the ground. I wasn't sure it was still sound enough to make use of but thought the crotch was worth a shot. Depending on how it looks after drying awhile, I'll probably go back and mill the rest of the larger part down. I think there was another 6-8' between this crotch and the stump end still.
Even though there isn't much snow left and the days have been pretty warm (+14°C here today downtown and beautifully sunny), it was still frozen down pretty hard. A quick whack with the 8lb maul fixed that. I never measured it, but I'd be guessing about 12-14" on the main trunk and 7" on the branch.
Got the 395XP w/ 33" bar rigged up and set to depth with the guide board to split it right down the center.
I was a little disappointed to be honest; I was hoping for a bit of figured wood, but there really isn't any. Just a few odd areas around some knots. Still, though, it has some nice streaking and character - the wood is bordering on going soft in a few areas though, so I'll have to take extra care working with it. You can't really tell in the picture, but the branch piece has some nice open grain and its coloring and pattern are very much like Maple rather than Birch.
Here's what I ended up with. The two largest bookmatched slabs on the right are a bit over 2" thick; not sure what I'll use them for yet, but I was thinking maybe legs for a live-edge trestle-style coffee table or something. The rest of the pieces are 1-1/8" thick. Hopefully they don't check or split too badly. I've had mixed results with older Birch like this - some dry out really nice and sound, and others have terrible ring shake and split from end to end, and it isn't a drying or stickering issue either.
Nice looking stack of wood for the little time it took! I'm going to paint the ends still, and throw a couple hundred pounds on top just to keep them nice and flat. I really like the streaked coloring though. I'd have rather found a bunch of spalted and figured wood, but hey, they can't all be diamonds. I deliberately dropped that tree in a wet area two years ago to see if it would go spalted, but no such luck. There are hints of it here and there, but I think by the time it progressed much farther the wood would be too far gone to be of use.
It probably took me less than 45 minutes to mill this out. The saw was cutting really nicely, and it doesn't take too long to set up on short blocks like this. No wedging and/or leveling the guide!
There's still a fair amount of this log out on the ground. I wasn't sure it was still sound enough to make use of but thought the crotch was worth a shot. Depending on how it looks after drying awhile, I'll probably go back and mill the rest of the larger part down. I think there was another 6-8' between this crotch and the stump end still.
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