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Posted

Here ya go. Used the BigBoy saw. Crosscut 2 3/4" x 8" longleaf pine video. Plus a still of the resawn the plank. Used the thicker 60T blade, kept the board moving, no burn, a little etching here and there. :Cheer:

 

280537938_resawn3inchyellowpine.JPG.9ef5eab4b6d154e6f19122f52a9cd7ee.JPG

 

 

 

 

 

  • Like 3
Posted

That is some beautiful pine. Guessing the aroma from the fresh cut was wonderful?

  • Like 2
Posted

Get your umbrellas ready. Rain's a coming. Yard all mowed today...well yesterday now. It's been two weeks. Still found some standing water even on the high ground.

Posted
5 hours ago, Grandpadave52 said:

That is some beautiful pine. Guessing the aroma from the fresh cut was wonderful?

That single piece I've been looking at for a few weeks now before cutting. The sawdust was all more yellow than the last cuttings. Even through my 3M half facepiece respirator with twin P100 filters, I got a whiff of the pine.

 

After shaving the end to square it up, I decided to take a few slices because the grain is so vivid. Components of a small tray with this wood are on the table but polishing up the wood is a head scratcher. I'll want the insides mar-free before gluing it up. Steel wood makes a mess.  I'll try 220 but may have to put a special edge on my scrapers and muscle the grain sharp and sparkling.

 

After squaring up the end I got two lovely 2 3/4" x 2 3/4" x 23" posts plus a remainder. Seven slats per post plus two from the scrap. More wastage with the thicker blade but it sure made a nice cut.

 

948332984_squaringupheartpinejoist.JPG.243919f6c2ac0cf6b0f6ee1cbcb88268.JPG  

 

488832176_rippingaheartpinejoist.JPG.5aaafd2ea7ce3b27e4ac136fef56ecb4.JPG

  • Like 3
Posted

That is absolutely gorgeous pine. :TwoThumbsUp:

  • Like 2
Posted
8 minutes ago, Gene Howe said:

That is absolutely gorgeous pine:TwoThumbsUp:

Love at first sight :OldManSmiley:

 

Lemmie ask youse this. Everything I 'read' says a thin kerf blade is essential to getting the most out of my 110 lb. 10" Delta ∆ Contractor Saw. Doesn't a thin blade heat up faster? I recall (Dave?) telling me of blade warp.

 

I've got 3 decent thin blades plus a trash blade, but went with the thicker Oshlun this time. Lost a good inch of board. Nearly a third of my wood at my cut specs. Took a break every half-dozen resaws.  The blade stayed cool.  The wood didn't have burn marks.

 

Correlation?  Will a hot blade cut clean if the wood keeps moving or is burn a typical issue ? By myself I get the best resaw backing the wood away and moving to the outboard side for the final pull-through, so there is 'rest' time but it did not signify in the quality of the resaw.

  • Like 1
Posted

SHARP thin kerf blades shouldn't heat up appreciably in pine of reasonable thickness...2" or, less. Re sawing is best accomplished with a band saw, though. If you must re saw with the Delta, the thicker kerf blade would be best. What's the Oshlun's tooth count? Fewer teeth (24) is faster but rougher cut. More teeth (60-80) smoother cut but, feed rate should be slowed. 

Posted
1 hour ago, Gene Howe said:

SHARP thin kerf blades shouldn't heat up appreciably

Thanks, Gene. All of my skinny blades are 'found' and while they feel sharp, I'm just assuming they are sharp because none of the teeth look broken or rounded. Guess I aught to pay more attention to which blades are burning the wood, and mark them as "gifts" to the buddy with the garage. Near everything I cut is pretty hard pine, supposedly as hard as red oak. Lots of it is over 2.5"

 

The 10" Oshlun is 0.094" 60T. I thought it 1/8" but its closer to 1/10". This is the resaw ripping, 2 3/4", and the pic is just after cutting. A near perfect finish which only will want a scraping. The image is 1200 x 1200 pixels. Zoom on in and take a gander.

 

280537938_resawn3inchyellowpine.JPG.9ef5eab4b6d154e6f19122f52a9cd7ee.JPG

 

7 hours ago, Woodman said:

Steel wood makes a mess.  I'll try 220

The end-grain cross-cut scraps cleaned up to a fuzzy dullness with fresh 5" 8-hole. Then a scraping brought back some the pop. There is still a discoloration from the steel wool but I'm not going to sweat it. This'll be a nice utility tray and next piece I get, I'll crosscut enough to make several. And be far more mindful to preserving the appearance.

 

1092514574_heartpinecomponentsforsmalltray.JPG.2e34ed3040bca65d6b2454632ce8e0ea.JPG

  • Like 2
Posted

That old pine is just beautiful Jim. Great vision to preserve a small piece of history. 

Posted
5 hours ago, Woodman said:

Thanks, Doc! :TwoThumbsUp:I appreciate the support! :Cheer:

 

1898981030_smallheartwoodpinetray.JPG.1e70db9bc7e10f6abfe8e951d2912cb2.JPG

:Praise::Praise::Praise: Excellent grain wrapping match!!

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