Tassie Blackwood (fiddleback) being talked about UB forum
Tassie Blackwood (fiddleback) being talked about UB forum
Check out following thread on Ubeaut Forums. Tim or Bob you might want to get involved.
http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au ... post923964
Cheers Martin
http://www.woodworkforums.ubeaut.com.au ... post923964
Cheers Martin
- graham mcdonald
- Blackwood
- Posts: 473
- Joined: Thu Oct 25, 2007 11:57 am
- Location: Canberra
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One of you who can post on that forum should point out as loudly and forcefully as possible that to cut up blackwood into thin slices when its wet will just lead to potato chips. It will warp as you look at it as it comes off the saw. 1-2" thick chunks and leave them for a year per inch of thickness before even thinking about resawing
This timber should be saved!!!
graham
This timber should be saved!!!
graham
Graham McDonald
http://www.mcdonaldstrings.com
http://www.mcdonaldstrings.com
Yes Graham, that was sort of suggested early on the first page.
Unfortunately the bloke who now has the wood and the saw appears as if he is going to be foolish enough to try and keep all the people happy all of the time, even though most of them offering directions clearly have only enough knowledge to be dangerous. He will no doubt waste much to gain little and then those with their hands up now will be nowhere in sight when the time comes to make good with collecting their demands.
It's sad but you see this happen a lot. People see what a good set of tonewood sells for and immediately think to themselves, 'I will have me a bit of that!' and they begin to convert the log in their mind with the dollar signs rolling in their eyes. But most never stop to consider 'WHY' tonewood should demands such a high price in the first place, and sadly, by the time the hens roost, much has been wasted in giving a lesson to an opportunistic student who will never repeated the process again, not just because of the lack of gain, but because they still do not understand what went wrong, and that is because they have never understood the basic fundamentals of wood to begin with.
Nothing more dangerous than a fool with a tool.
Cheers
Kim
Unfortunately the bloke who now has the wood and the saw appears as if he is going to be foolish enough to try and keep all the people happy all of the time, even though most of them offering directions clearly have only enough knowledge to be dangerous. He will no doubt waste much to gain little and then those with their hands up now will be nowhere in sight when the time comes to make good with collecting their demands.
It's sad but you see this happen a lot. People see what a good set of tonewood sells for and immediately think to themselves, 'I will have me a bit of that!' and they begin to convert the log in their mind with the dollar signs rolling in their eyes. But most never stop to consider 'WHY' tonewood should demands such a high price in the first place, and sadly, by the time the hens roost, much has been wasted in giving a lesson to an opportunistic student who will never repeated the process again, not just because of the lack of gain, but because they still do not understand what went wrong, and that is because they have never understood the basic fundamentals of wood to begin with.

Nothing more dangerous than a fool with a tool.
Cheers
Kim
- Stephen Kinnaird
- Blackwood
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- Location: Texas, USA
- sebastiaan56
- Blackwood
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- Joined: Sun Oct 28, 2007 5:23 am
- Location: Blue Mountains
- Bob Connor
- Admin
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- Location: Geelong, Australia
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Just to be a contrarian
I cut my Blackwood when it's reasonably wet (around 20%) and have had no problems with around 80 sets from 6 different trees.
Mind you most of it has been cut in the autumn so it will dry slowly over winter.
I've just cut 20 sets of Tassie Blackwood in the last week and am about to tackle 125 super feet of Otways stuff which was cut 3-4 months ago.
So I wouldn't discount it totally.

I cut my Blackwood when it's reasonably wet (around 20%) and have had no problems with around 80 sets from 6 different trees.
Mind you most of it has been cut in the autumn so it will dry slowly over winter.
I've just cut 20 sets of Tassie Blackwood in the last week and am about to tackle 125 super feet of Otways stuff which was cut 3-4 months ago.
So I wouldn't discount it totally.
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