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RoyJ
 
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Hydraulic only!! Ever see a 24 ton splitting ram come down on a 16"
block of straight grain elm, bury itself in a couple inches, and STOP?
Sheesh! Had to use a sledge hammer to get the ram out of the log.

The new sapwood for each year grows in a spiral pattern. But not
necessarily the same pattern each year so you could have a left hand
spiral one year, right hand the next, straight the third year.

Karl Vorwerk wrote:

I made the mistake of trying to split some elm for firewood once.
Karl


"Tim Wescott" wrote in message
...

bob wrote:


I want to make a wood screw for a vise(2in. dia). I have tried using
dried and green oak and 3 tpi. The threads for the nut cut very nicely
but the outside threads are a mess. Lots of chipping and tearing. Is it
the wood, the tool grind ,or me? I have also tried cherry and it was
worse than oak. My brother ground the tool for the inside threads and I
ground the tool for outside and am a relative clutz so I hope it is
just the grind. Anyone with experience doing this?
Thanks,
Bob


Perhaps do a search on wooden screws ("wood screw" makes me think of a
screw to go into wood) -- anything that's easy to split won't make good
threads, because you're asking them to hold along the grain, where the
wood is very weak. I think you're right in trying different woods, but
you haven't looked far enough afield to find the right one.

I'd try Elm. Elm was used for wheel hubs because it has a dense
interlocking grain -- apparently it was a bitch to work with because you
simply could not split out blanks but had to saw everything. Assuming the
grain is fine enough that should be just what you want for this part.

Obligatory disclaimer: I haven't actually done this; I've just watched a
lot of episodes of "the woodwright's shop" and read a couple of Roy
Underhill's books.

--

Tim Wescott
Wescott Design Services
http://www.wescottdesign.com




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