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Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
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construction pine is not even close to being dry - as in 7-8% moisture
content. Depending on the temp/humidity in your shop, it could take weeks to dry out enough to be called "stable". wrote in message ups.com... New to building furniture (not new to finishing work), and my first project is a utility table for the woodshop. I'm overbuilding the hell out of this thing because I want a "practice" project that I can actually use. Rather than use plywood for the tabletop, I glued-up some 4/4 pine so I could practice glue-ups. Now, mind you, this is a *first* project, so I used the cheapest wood I could get...construction pine. Knotty as hell to be sure. But I have a planer and jointer, so I dressed and four-squared the lumber quite well. Or so I tought. I had the lumber acclimatizing in my shop for about three weeks. I first rough-dimensioned it, then let that sit for another 3 - 4 days in case it moved again. Finally, I four-squared it to its final dimensions and glued it up. Only to find that, after gluing-it up to near perfection (straight, flat, I was damn proud!), ONE of the four boards has cupped AGAIN and warped the tabletop. Granted, I'm using crappy plainsawn knotty pine, but is that my only mistake here? Thanks for any help! |
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