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Woodturning (rec.crafts.woodturning) To discuss tools, techniques, styles, materials, shows and competitions, education and educational materials related to woodturning. All skill levels are welcome, from art turners to production turners, beginners to masters. |
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#1
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Bradford peartree logs question
I have 6 logs that are 10" across and 12" long. I was wondering what you
think of these loges for turning bowls. Thanks for your opinions. |
#2
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Bradford peartree logs question
Will wrote:
I have 6 logs that are 10" across and 12" long. I was wondering what you think of these loges for turning bowls. Thanks for your opinions. Seal the ends fast. I have had great success turning bowls from Bradford Pear. It is a rather featureless wood but turns and sands very well and makes a glass-like finish. -- Gerald Ross Cochran, GA Show me a good loser and I'll show you a loser. |
#3
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Bradford peartree logs question
Bradford Pear is very fine grained, almost like Boxwood. It is a rather
bland tan color with little grain figure. It warps quite a bit when turned wet. Dry, you get these wispy fine shavings and a very smooth surface. Or, at least that's my experience. Barry "Will" wrote in message m... I have 6 logs that are 10" across and 12" long. I was wondering what you think of these loges for turning bowls. Thanks for your opinions. |
#4
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Bradford peartree logs question
Will wrote:
I have 6 logs that are 10" across and 12" long. I was wondering what you think of these loges for turning bowls. Thanks for your opinions. Aha! I've been waiting months to say this! Go to my website http://nmwoodworks.com/gallery . The poster child is a pear wood kaleidoscope hanging from a walnut stand. You'll find a fuller set of pics in the "Adult Toys" section. I turned at the boundary between sap and heartwood and found very nice shadings. Not sure if it's a Bradford pear or not, but the logs were distinctly darker in the center, (Search in Google Earth for 12500 West Outer Dr., Detroit, MI to see the tree while still standing. It's the one off by itself on the right near the road. You can angle Google Earth enough to maybe be able to make a better identification of the exact species.) Bill -- I am disillusioned enough to know that no man's opinion on any subject is worth a **** unless backed up with enough genuine information to make him really know what he's talking about. H. P. Lovecraft --- avast! Antivirus: Outbound message clean. Virus Database (VPS): 000721-0, 03/02/2007 Tested on: 3/2/2007 11:19:56 PM avast! - copyright (c) 1988-2007 ALWIL Software. http://www.avast.com |
#5
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Bradford peartree logs question
Bill in Detroit wrote:
Will wrote: I have 6 logs that are 10" across and 12" long. I was wondering what you think of these loges for turning bowls. Thanks for your opinions. Aha! I've been waiting months to say this! Go to my website http://nmwoodworks.com/gallery . The poster child is a pear wood kaleidoscope hanging from a walnut stand. You'll find a fuller set of pics in the "Adult Toys" section. I turned at the boundary between sap and heartwood and found very nice shadings. Not sure if it's a Bradford pear or not, but the logs were distinctly darker in the center, (Search in Google Earth for 12500 West Outer Dr., Detroit, MI to see the tree while still standing. It's the one off by itself on the right near the road. You can angle Google Earth enough to maybe be able to make a better identification of the exact species.) Bill That doesn't look like Bradford Pear. I will try to put a picture of a bradford pear bowl on ABPW today if I can get to it. -- Gerald Ross Cochran, GA Show me a good loser and I'll show you a loser. |
#6
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Bradford peartree logs question
Will wrote:
I have 6 logs that are 10" across and 12" long. I was wondering what you think of these loges for turning bowls. Thanks for your opinions. My woodturning club (Alabama Woodturners) got a load of Bradford Pear when one of the suburbs of Birmingham decided to remove the Bradford Pears from the median of US 31 as it goes through their town. I got in on the end of the pile and got two pieces. One I split down the middle and got two shallow bowls out of. The other was an odd piece. Picture a tree that has been pruned to a single trunk to height of about 6' and then allowed to develop a crown of branches. The piece was about 10" in diameter and so I figured I would turn a pedestal bowl (champaign bucket) from it, turning down the log. I made the end the bottom, figuring the pedestal would remove the problem areas where the branches came in. Plan worked great, besides jumping off the chuck about a half a dozen times, that is. I left the walls about 1" thick and set it aside to dry. A couple of days later I went out to the shed and "Lo and Behold!!!!" The sides of the bucket has cracked all the way through. This proves the old adage, "Woodworkers have the most unusual firewood. The shallow bowls are fine, so far. But after about three weeks, if they were going to crack, I imagine they would have. Deb |
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