Between you shops location say in Florida or the Humid Southeat, and say a Customer who is in DRY Arizona.
Warpage is the question??
Warpage is the question??
I do the same but I'm in California ( between the ocean and the desert.Chris Byrne said:That is specificly why I dont agree with having the wood in a climate controlled environment from day one. I let my woods dry a couple years or so in a room in my house. Then I start processing them and I store them in an unheated uninsulated garage for the first several months of turnings. I want them to get hot and cold daily as well as the moisture swings. I may loose a few extra pieces that way but I figure better to loose a piece of wood then than a whole butt or shaft and the customer who bought it. Chris.
Well I guess you are just not dedicated. LOLmasonh said:i take my wood to Death Valley in the summer and let it sit in the sand,then in winter i take it to Antarctica and let it settle into the snow drifts.in the fall it goes to Lybia for a few months and then it goes back to the cold in Siberia where i bury it in the bottom of an glacier where it sits for 3 months.
after 8.5 years of constant rotation in these spots i then start cutting it from 1.5" dowells only removing .005" each pass while waiting 6 months between passes.:grin-square:
just kidding,mine sits in a gargae where the temp ranges from 60-80 degrees.