Question: If a piece of wood is sitting on my shelf and all of the pours or air spaces between the grain and the fibers are at 14.7 psig., why would I want to put them in vacuum? I would think that they would have to be placed in a pressure vessel that increased the pressure in that tank.
The fluid would want to seek out the lower pressure areas in the wood and or membranes to equalize to the high ambient tank pressure due to the differential ("Delta P").
Rick G
Rick, if there is air in the wood and you apply pressure you compress that air. When the pressure is released the compressed air pushes the stabilizer back out.
Pulling a vacuum removes the air and reduces the pressure in the wood.
When the vacuum is released normal atmospheric pressure (around 14.7 psig) pushes the stabilizer into the wood.
Or as most people think of it ... it sucks the stabilized deep into the wood.
Same principal as a sponge if you squeeze it (driving out the air), place it under water and release it.
The fact that the wood sinks to the bottom of the tank when the vacuum is applied, shows me I am removing air from the wood.
There are risks involved in just about every aspect of cue making.
I would hope the risks are understood and minimized as much as possible before anyone attempted a new process using chemicals.
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