I would like to add this amendment to this thread and bring readers' attention to my last two posts. There was a brain missfire on my part concerning the seller of some shaft wood I purchased which I do not like. The saga ensues:
At various times I have bought shaft wood (not just "wood", but "shaft wood") with very fancy price tags and exotic names..."120 years old", "salvaged from the Lusitania", "blessed by the guru", "the handle of George Washington's hatchet", ...on and on. Sometimes it even has straight grain. Some has grain like a road through the mountains. The ones with straight grain seem to stay straight when I make a shaft from them; the ones with crazy, crooked run-out grain, not so much. This all figures.
Why do people sell this nasty, run-out ridden wood and call it shaft wood?? Regardless of it's background. I mean, really, grain at a 45 degree angle to the center axis? Knots?? We're not talking curl or eyes. We're talking "grain goes out the side in 10 inches"
And why would anyone buy it? I bought it because the seller claimed it was great shaft wood.
Is there any attribute more important in shaft wood than absence of grain runout? Well, dryness, but beside that. Is there some quality wood can have that makes runout not matter?
Thanks, Robin
At various times I have bought shaft wood (not just "wood", but "shaft wood") with very fancy price tags and exotic names..."120 years old", "salvaged from the Lusitania", "blessed by the guru", "the handle of George Washington's hatchet", ...on and on. Sometimes it even has straight grain. Some has grain like a road through the mountains. The ones with straight grain seem to stay straight when I make a shaft from them; the ones with crazy, crooked run-out grain, not so much. This all figures.
Why do people sell this nasty, run-out ridden wood and call it shaft wood?? Regardless of it's background. I mean, really, grain at a 45 degree angle to the center axis? Knots?? We're not talking curl or eyes. We're talking "grain goes out the side in 10 inches"
And why would anyone buy it? I bought it because the seller claimed it was great shaft wood.
Is there any attribute more important in shaft wood than absence of grain runout? Well, dryness, but beside that. Is there some quality wood can have that makes runout not matter?
Thanks, Robin
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