unscientific strip tests
- matthew
- Blackwood
- Posts: 1200
- Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 1:16 pm
- Location: Sydney, Inner West
- Contact:
unscientific strip tests
I cut six strips of wood I have in my workshop, keeping the grain orientation similar with each.
Each strip is exactly 10" long, 1" wide and 5mm thick (yeah I'm mixing up the standards a bit)
I have strips of WRCedar, Spruce (DB bracewood, no idea what variety), Celerytop, Silky Oak, Tas Oak and Crapiata. And one other strip of celerytop, cut crossgrain.
I soaked the strips overnight in water.
The strip that has expanded the most was the celerytop crossgrain strip, as you'd expect. It grew by about 6mm!
The other strips hardly changed longways. Interestingly, the strip that changed the MOST was the spruce! It grew about 1mm. The others barely noticeably, the silky oak about 0.5mm.
The only thing I can infer from this that the spruce strip is the most reactive to moisture of the woods tested.
I dried the strips out in the sun for two days and they all returned to 10" long.
I flexed the strips, unscientifically, and tried to grade them bendiest to stiffest. I got
Silky Oak
Tas Oak
WRCedar
Crapiata
Spruce
Celerytop
I flexed and tapped them all without looking. Most I could identify fairly easily. The two "oaks" are bendy but slower to spring back. The cedar is noticeably lighter but just as springy. The crapiata feels like the spruce, but a bit more flexible.
However I consistently mixed up the celerytop and the spruce. Every other time I thought I had a positive ID, turns out I was wrong. They feel very similar in spring and weight. The celerytop appears to have a lower tap tone than the spruce. This is the only way I can tell them apart by feel.
I was considering trying celerytop for back and sides but maybe I'd be better of trying it on a top?
I don't know if all this is interesting or just a waste of time.
Maybe someone could devise a series of useful more scientific tests and then twist the arm of someone with a good range of wood samples to test and share the results.
Each strip is exactly 10" long, 1" wide and 5mm thick (yeah I'm mixing up the standards a bit)
I have strips of WRCedar, Spruce (DB bracewood, no idea what variety), Celerytop, Silky Oak, Tas Oak and Crapiata. And one other strip of celerytop, cut crossgrain.
I soaked the strips overnight in water.
The strip that has expanded the most was the celerytop crossgrain strip, as you'd expect. It grew by about 6mm!
The other strips hardly changed longways. Interestingly, the strip that changed the MOST was the spruce! It grew about 1mm. The others barely noticeably, the silky oak about 0.5mm.
The only thing I can infer from this that the spruce strip is the most reactive to moisture of the woods tested.
I dried the strips out in the sun for two days and they all returned to 10" long.
I flexed the strips, unscientifically, and tried to grade them bendiest to stiffest. I got
Silky Oak
Tas Oak
WRCedar
Crapiata
Spruce
Celerytop
I flexed and tapped them all without looking. Most I could identify fairly easily. The two "oaks" are bendy but slower to spring back. The cedar is noticeably lighter but just as springy. The crapiata feels like the spruce, but a bit more flexible.
However I consistently mixed up the celerytop and the spruce. Every other time I thought I had a positive ID, turns out I was wrong. They feel very similar in spring and weight. The celerytop appears to have a lower tap tone than the spruce. This is the only way I can tell them apart by feel.
I was considering trying celerytop for back and sides but maybe I'd be better of trying it on a top?
I don't know if all this is interesting or just a waste of time.
Maybe someone could devise a series of useful more scientific tests and then twist the arm of someone with a good range of wood samples to test and share the results.
It's interesting so far, and it's 100% empirically gained knowledge that you will always have on 'hand'.I don't know if all this is interesting or just a waste of time.
Is it scientific ?
'Feel' is a science, otherwise how the hell would anyone figure out how to play a double bass and interact with the science of music ?
The 'invisible jukebox' blind testing sounds like fun too & you're storing away more information in your hands for your next table carve.
Cheers, A.P.
MOE is stiffness Higher is better
Ratio of Force required to produce a deflection
A good table here
http://www.worldwideflood.com/ark/wood/timber_list.htm
Jeff
Ratio of Force required to produce a deflection
A good table here
http://www.worldwideflood.com/ark/wood/timber_list.htm
Jeff
- Dave White
- Blackwood
- Posts: 452
- Joined: Mon Nov 12, 2007 3:10 am
- Location: Hughenden Valley, England
- Contact:
Matthew,
I had my shades ready based on the title of this thread but not a naked body in sight
You might find this OLF thread an interesting read with different set ups for deflection teasting discussed. Calculating Youngs modulus gives a measure of strength to weight which is an important measure.
I had my shades ready based on the title of this thread but not a naked body in sight

You might find this OLF thread an interesting read with different set ups for deflection teasting discussed. Calculating Youngs modulus gives a measure of strength to weight which is an important measure.
Dave White
[url=http://www.defaoiteguitars.com]De Faoite Stringed Instruments[/url]
[url=http://www.defaoiteguitars.com]De Faoite Stringed Instruments[/url]
Dave White said "Calculating Youngs modulus gives a measure of strength to weight which is an important measure"
I'm going to be a little pedantic here Dave, ex structural engineer here,
Youngs modulus has NOTHING to do with either strength or weight.
Think of it this way, laymans terms.
Strength is how much force it takes to break or permanantly deform a material
Youngs modulus measures Stiffness or how much a Force deflects or compresses or stretches a material.
So whilst rubber or wood might carry the same load, the rubber will probable move more and hence have a lower youngs modulus.
Once you have a MOE you also have to look at the density of the material to determine if the stiffness to density ratio is acceptable.
I'm going to be a little pedantic here Dave, ex structural engineer here,
Youngs modulus has NOTHING to do with either strength or weight.
Think of it this way, laymans terms.
Strength is how much force it takes to break or permanantly deform a material
Youngs modulus measures Stiffness or how much a Force deflects or compresses or stretches a material.
So whilst rubber or wood might carry the same load, the rubber will probable move more and hence have a lower youngs modulus.
Once you have a MOE you also have to look at the density of the material to determine if the stiffness to density ratio is acceptable.
- Dave White
- Blackwood
- Posts: 452
- Joined: Mon Nov 12, 2007 3:10 am
- Location: Hughenden Valley, England
- Contact:
Jeff,
Good point - but which Young's modulus are you referring to? I was meaning the one developed in 1884 by Zaccharia Young - who at the time was the worlds strongest, but not heaviest dwarf who wanted to demonstrate that weight wasn't everything and came up with his modulus to show this.
I say this as an ex-comedian
Good point - but which Young's modulus are you referring to? I was meaning the one developed in 1884 by Zaccharia Young - who at the time was the worlds strongest, but not heaviest dwarf who wanted to demonstrate that weight wasn't everything and came up with his modulus to show this.

I say this as an ex-comedian

Dave White
[url=http://www.defaoiteguitars.com]De Faoite Stringed Instruments[/url]
[url=http://www.defaoiteguitars.com]De Faoite Stringed Instruments[/url]
- Dave White
- Blackwood
- Posts: 452
- Joined: Mon Nov 12, 2007 3:10 am
- Location: Hughenden Valley, England
- Contact:
According to the viagra SPAM e-mails I keep getting they are the samejeffhigh wrote: We had the difference between strength and stiffness drummed ito us at University...........a loooong time ago.
Jeff


Dave White
[url=http://www.defaoiteguitars.com]De Faoite Stringed Instruments[/url]
[url=http://www.defaoiteguitars.com]De Faoite Stringed Instruments[/url]
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 83 guests