How To Make Treated Lumber
I'm getting ready to cut my own lumber from trees and I want to use the
lumber for an outside project. What can I do to make the lumber survive outside? Can I make my own treated lumber? Thanks, Dale |
|
Sure you can. If it is made commercially, you can make it too. How much
money have you got? The equipment could be a might bit expensive. "David" wrote in message ... wrote: I'm getting ready to cut my own lumber from trees and I want to use the lumber for an outside project. What can I do to make the lumber survive outside? Can I make my own treated lumber? Thanks, Dale no |
" writes:
I'm getting ready to cut my own lumber from trees and I want to use the lumber for an outside project. What can I do to make the lumber survive outside? Can I make my own treated lumber? Depend. Do you like working with Arsenic? -- Sending unsolicited commercial e-mail to this account incurs a fee of $500 per message, and acknowledges the legality of this contract. |
If you live in Manville NJ you can just lay the lumber in your
backyard. The creosote in the ground will leech into the lumber. Other than that I don't think so. |
|
On 11 Sep 2005 18:49:16 -0700, with neither quill nor qualm,
" quickly quoth: I'm getting ready to cut my own lumber from trees and I want to use the lumber for an outside project. What can I do to make the lumber survive outside? Can I make my own treated lumber? Cut only black locust, cedar, redwood, or cypress trees for outside lumber. Or take your cut pineywood to a kiln who will pressure-treat it for you. That should be a good trick! -- Never ascribe to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity. --------------- www.diversify.com -- Smart Website Design |
"RayV" wrote in news:1126528752.842537.174880
@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: If you live in Manville NJ you can just lay the lumber in your backyard. The creosote in the ground will leech into the lumber. Other than that I don't think so. That is blatantly NOT TRUE! The asbestos fibers in the ground contamination soaked up all the creosote years ago! |
wrote in message ps.com... I'm getting ready to cut my own lumber from trees and I want to use the lumber for an outside project. What can I do to make the lumber survive outside? Can I make my own treated lumber? Thanks, Dale It would probably be many many times cheaper to simply buy the wood that meets you specifications. |
|
"A Lurker" wrote in message ... "RayV" wrote in news:1126528752.842537.174880 @g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com: If you live in Manville NJ you can just lay the lumber in your backyard. The creosote in the ground will leech into the lumber. Other than that I don't think so. That is blatantly NOT TRUE! The asbestos fibers in the ground contamination soaked up all the creosote years ago! Which exit is that located ? :) -- Chris If you can read this, thank a teacher. If it is in English, thank a soldier. If it is in ebonics, thank your Congressman. |
Exit 10 to 287 N
Follow the glow from there |
"RayV" wrote in message oups.com... Exit 10 to 287 N Follow the glow from there Got it. Is that not the toll booth that hands out MSDSs after you pay the toll? |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:50 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter