View Single Post
  #8   Report Post  
Posted to rec.woodworking
Martin H. Eastburn Martin H. Eastburn is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,852
Default Help with bugs: are there any or not?

I have bugs that ate a tree to nothing. I cut a very nasty Honey Locust.
I even thought about trying to turn it - but it was to far gone while green.

The Locust when cut bleed a white sap that must have been the sugar within.
Within months the tree was almost powder - but the fire ants moved in and
got the bugs and then the rest of the sap. Almost powder in a year.

I really wonder about the 130 - likely 130 C if valid.

Martin

scritch wrote:
dadiOH wrote:
basilisk wrote:
scritch wrote:

I scored some (almost) free CVG Douglas fir several months ago, and
I'm finally getting around to thinking of its best use. It is
beautiful wood, ruler-straight grain, clear as Lake Tahoe, and has
up to 30+ rings per inch. The pieces were part of an old workbench,
and have a few odd drillholes here and there, but I like used wood a
lot.

Unfortunately, there are also a lot of bug holes, from at least two
kinds of bugs, given the diameters of the holes. I have had the wood
for several months now, and have seen absolutely no sign that the
bugs are still in there. No bugs, no eggs, no bug parts, no
suspicious sawdust. I have had carpenter ants in my house twice,
and know the look of ant sawdust, but have seen nothing on this fir.

Is there any way short of cutting the wood into little strips to find
out if the bugs are still present and alive somehow?

Alternatively, I could treat the wood preemptively, just to make
sure. I'd rather not use poison, because I intend to use the wood as
part of a dresser. Does anyone know how much heat it takes to kill
most wood-eating insects? I saw a method for killing bedbugs that
uses a temporary styrofoam heat box for an entire mattress. If some
reasonably low heat could kill the bugs, I could rig one up myself.

Thanks!
USDA requires 130 degrees F core temperature for 30 minutes,

This will kill any insects present.

Basilisk


Should be able to easily do that with black plastic and sunlight.



Only 130 F? That seems cool. Maybe that's why I never hear of a
termite problem in Arizona.

Time to set up my temporary "oven"!