Silver Birch

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looks like it has been attacked by a beaver. sorry, no help on whether it is any good or not, but shouldnt take much more felling!
 
I Posted A silver birch bowl a few weeks ago I had the timber a short while my advice is use it asap because it rots very quickly and goes soft in s short time I turned mine wet in woodys workshop in October and finished it in march that looks ok but watch the beaver don't get yers ........... :D
regards
Bill
 
It spalts very easily and can go too far quickly. Its worth a punt, pack garden muck around it and leave it in the garden for a month then dry it out. Birch is quite brittle and is dimensionally unstable as a timber which is why it is used as drawer lippings or cut into small bits and used in engineered flooring, the spalting process can help to remove some of the tension in the wood. As Bill says though it can go too far quickly.
 
I have some silver birch in my wood store. I did not know that it deteriorates quickly - I had better have a look and see if I need to turn it straight away, or just put it on the woodburner!
 
henton49er":4w7oq08j said:
I have some silver birch in my wood store. I did not know that it deteriorates quickly - I had better have a look and see if I need to turn it straight away, or just put it on the woodburner!
Don't bung it on woodburner mike think Of me :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
regards
Bill
 
henton49er":3jvkfhsb said:
I have some silver birch in my wood store. I did not know that it deteriorates quickly - I had better have a look and see if I need to turn it straight away, or just put it on the woodburner!

It should be okay if it's in the dry and off any damp ground, Mike. I quite like birch for turning, although if grown around here it sometimes has rather wild grain (pretty) but this can make it rather difficult to get a good finish off the tool - and it doesn't respond well to a lot of sanding (it sands away very quickly!) It was often used to make craft tools like bobbins, knitting pins, drop spindles etc and works well for such items.
 
Hi,

I turned some burrs they came out nice, lots of soft bits that needed super gluing before and during sanding.
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Pete
 
I had some BIG lumps but I assumed it would season reasonabl;y slowly in the garden.

WRONG

After a year it was rotten through and through. Well, the centre was, and I have managed to work on a few bits. Until the lathe exploded.
 
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