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I purchased about 60 bd feet of 8/4 Jatoba and I'm ready to burn the whole pile of it. Might be toxic though…
I have never used a material that twisted and bowed and checked like this stuff does. It was sitting on a pallet at my wholesale supply, and I asked what the price was, and since it was reasonable, I bought some for myself and a friend.
Some of the pieces were 18" wide x 10' long, most being about 10-12" wide.
I carefully stacked it in the loft of the barn, and took one piece into the shop to see what it would look like finished. After leaving it a couple days to acclimate to the shop temperature, I couldn't believe how it checked along the length of the piece, and not just a bit on the surface, it is deep.
After cutting a two foot piece off, I flattened it on the Performax and took it to the bandsaw to slice it up. I have cut a few hundred board feet on the bandsaw but never heard a crack as loud as this was when it got close to the end of the first cut. There must be tremendous internal pressure in this material.
It is extremely heavy material, but at 8% moisture content, I don't undstand why it behaves like this…
Anybody with a good experience?
I have never used a material that twisted and bowed and checked like this stuff does. It was sitting on a pallet at my wholesale supply, and I asked what the price was, and since it was reasonable, I bought some for myself and a friend.
Some of the pieces were 18" wide x 10' long, most being about 10-12" wide.
I carefully stacked it in the loft of the barn, and took one piece into the shop to see what it would look like finished. After leaving it a couple days to acclimate to the shop temperature, I couldn't believe how it checked along the length of the piece, and not just a bit on the surface, it is deep.
After cutting a two foot piece off, I flattened it on the Performax and took it to the bandsaw to slice it up. I have cut a few hundred board feet on the bandsaw but never heard a crack as loud as this was when it got close to the end of the first cut. There must be tremendous internal pressure in this material.
It is extremely heavy material, but at 8% moisture content, I don't undstand why it behaves like this…
Anybody with a good experience?