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-   -   Kwazinga, (sic) son of Bubinga (https://www.diybanter.com/woodworking/105757-kwazinga-sic-son-bubinga.html)

[email protected] May 9th 05 01:34 PM

Kwazinga, (sic) son of Bubinga
 
Around Chicago there are a couple of Owl Hardwood Lumber outlets. I
visited one in a search for some 12" or wider walnut. Right by the
front door of the store
laid out on the floor so you could almost trip over them was a stack of
boards labeled Kwazinga (my spelling on this may be incorrect) The
boards were 1 1/4" thick, 30" wide and 16' long. The wood was highly
figured and very exotic looking, so I talked the manager into selling
me a piece for a dashboard I needed to make. As it was explained to
me, the wood is a variation of bubinga wood and almost identical to
some smaller pieces of rosewood I have. One very important thing I
discovered when working it is that it has no structural integrity as a
solid board. Consequently, anyone buying the stuff as sold, hoping to
make solid-wood projects out of it would be soreley disappointed; Soon
after being dimensioned, it will begin to warp in every direction. The
property of the wood that makes it so beautiful is the way the grain
runs out every few inches, but this makes it practically unusable as a
solid board. The dashboard worked only because it gets fastened down
securely to sheet metal. Another problem is that
it can't be planed - tearouts 1/8" or deeper develop inevitably. I
made a firewall for a car out of it but only after running a wide piece
down to 1/8" on a big sanding machine and laminating it to plywood. So
anyone who buys this wood should be aware that it's only good for small
pieces and veneering after being resawn and sanded.


Never Enough Money May 9th 05 01:53 PM

Could it be "Kevazingo"?

See
http://www2.fpl.fs.fed.us/TechSheets...ourtiaspp.html

Notice "The other Common names."


toller May 9th 05 04:09 PM

I don't know what you got, but I just made a box out of waterfall bubinga,
and it can't be much more highly figured than that.

It is reasonably stable, with only a bit of tearout.



Patriarch May 9th 05 06:24 PM

wrote in news:1115642087.726786.174880
@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com:

snip
I made a firewall for a car out of it but only after running a wide piece
down to 1/8" on a big sanding machine and laminating it to plywood


I'm curious. What kind of car uses a plywood laminated firewall?

Unquestionably Confused May 9th 05 07:00 PM

on 5/9/2005 12:24 PM Patriarch said the following:
wrote in news:1115642087.726786.174880
@o13g2000cwo.googlegroups.com:

snip

I made a firewall for a car out of it but only after running a wide piece
down to 1/8" on a big sanding machine and laminating it to plywood



I'm curious. What kind of car uses a plywood laminated firewall?



Presumably one where you want a good, hot fire even if there's no fuel
leakageg



[email protected] May 9th 05 08:34 PM

A 1934 Stutz Bearcat, I should have explained. Not a Honda Civic.


[email protected] May 9th 05 08:37 PM

Yes, I should explain myself more often.


Homanator May 10th 05 02:07 AM

Well, when I was young (right after the last dinosaur died) some guys in the
hood had a car club. One car among them...with a wooden body.
wrote in message
oups.com...
A 1934 Stutz Bearcat, I should have explained. Not a Honda Civic.




[email protected] May 10th 05 04:01 AM



Homanator May 9, 9:07 pm

Well, when I was young (right after the last dinosaur died) some guys
in the
hood had a car club. One car among them...with a wooden body.

Naw, you're probably too young to remember this one. Some of them

from before 1940 had metal bodies, but were built around a wooden
framework, like the Stutz. Of course, the firewall was metal on the
engine side. The market for these cars is dwindling because nearly
everyone who remembers them has, unfortunately, passed on.



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