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Anna Kettle
 
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On Wed, 15 Dec 2004 12:05:28 +0000 (UTC), "Michael Mcneil"
wrote:

Wayne oak is susceptible but heartwood is quite good at standing up for
itself.


I suppose I assumed that joinery would be made only of heartwood, just
so it doesn't twist and warp, which is important for opening window
frames


However most ancient oak timbers were creosoted and covered with
pitch or some other standard preservative.
500 years ago a tree cultivated for the purpose it was eventually felled
for, would spend a few years pointing downstream in a clean, fast river.
This would wash out all its sugars and starches. It might then have been
buried in mud.


My experience is in using oak for massive timber framing. Timber
framers today don't use timber which has been preserved, or soaked, or
buried in mud. What they do like to use is airdried oak, not kiln
dried

What would be saved buy not using preservative? Ten or twelve quid?
At what price?


maybe preservative will clog up the pores so the timber can't breathe
properly ... maybe it will become impossible to get the silvery
weathered oak effect ...

Anna


~~ Anna Kettle, Suffolk, England
|""""| ~ Lime plaster repairs
/ ^^ \ // Freehand modelling in lime: overmantels, pargeting etc
|____| www.kettlenet.co.uk 01359 230642