[AT] OT Barn floor question
Robinson
robinson at svs.net
Thu Oct 21 09:10:46 PDT 2004
At 09:40 AM 10/21/04, you wrote:
>Thanks, Charlie -- and everybody else who has chimed in. When I
>restored this windmill the FIRST time, I was led to believe that there
>were two woods that were preferred -- cedar and poplar. I had both
>available, but chose to use poplar because it's a LOT clearer. BTW-
>this advice came from a windmill historical and restoration group. I
>figured they knew what they were talking about. Well as it turns out,
>there probably isn't a worse wood to use for exterior work than poplar,
>and that's what I used.
>
>The whole thing fell apart in about five years. Now I've got to start
>from scratch and do it all over again. In talking with a wood worker
>this week, he recommended redwood or cedar. I don't like either one.
>Redwood splits too easily, and cedar has too many knots. I really would
>prefer teak or cypress. Now, I'm talking BIG BUCKS!
>
>What I'm more likely to do is to use the treated lumber that Lowe's and
>Home Depot sell for deck construction. There was no way I would have
>considered this material when I was employed at the university and using
>their wood shop for all the mill work --- no way to isolate the area to
>protect people and the environment from arsenic. But I have a contact
>with a complete woodshop with filtered dust collectors on everything.
>If he'll work with me to do the resawing and other operations in his
>shop, then I may go that route. I wanted some feedback on the synthetic
>stuff so I would know whether or not that's a viable option. It sounds
>like it isn't. I don't want the salt treated lumber either. That's
>what I had in the floor of my trailer, and it didn't last.
>
>I notice that Home Depot is now posting a safety sheet by the bins where
>they store their treated lumber. It's kind of a consumer's edition of
>an MSDS and gives all the precautions to be followed in working with the
>arsenic-treated stuff.
>
>Does anybody have a good source for cypress? THAT'S what I really would
>like to use. I doubt very much that I would ever find locust or Osage
>Orange in a form and in enough quantity to do the job.
>
>FWIW, the windmill is a Flint & Walling model 26 on a 35-foot steel
>tower. Ten-foot diameter wheel, seven-foot tail.
>
>Larry
>
Hi Larry:
A friend of mine does a large amount of restoration mill work for
the state of Indiana on historic sites. When he made a new water wheel for
the mill at the old Metamora Canal site they had him build it out of black
walnut. Yellow poplar (tulip) makes a good weatherboard siding even
unpainted but in that case the edges are all protected. Otherwise I
consider it an indoor wood. The three old barns here were framed (post and
beam) with sycamore which was sawn here on the farm. It is fine for covered
use but it will not weather well at all. They were sided with southern
yellow pine shiplap siding. It is deteriorating badly now but has been
there for 80 years or more.
Last Sunday son Scott was moving some dirt for me with a large
backhoe to eliminate a bank of dirt along the road south of my house across
the little creek. The bank was about 3 to 4 feet high and he dug out the
feet of several black locust fence post that my father and I put in there
50 years ago. The part above the ground was gone but the stubs in the
ground were quite solid. We are getting rid of the bank since it is
impossible to mow when we mow the roads and is dangerous when working the
edge of the field. I came a lot closer to dropping a my Super MTA off of
there one day this summer than I really like. I had already planned to make
a cut through it for an entry drive to what will be a horse lot with a new
portable run-in shed. It just makes more sense to eliminate the whole bank.
We didn't do all of it Sunday, it runs about 200' and would require a lot
of moving the backhoe for each little section. Scott is going to bring a
tracked excavator home next week and he can just keep moving it along as he
goes. He will also dig a well pit for us where we are replacing a hand pump
with a regular electric water system. He is going to use it to do some
digging for a neighbor as well.
In the next few weeks he will bring home a small walking trencher
and we will install some short water lines to the horse stalls at the west
barn and some drain tiles under the floor of the east barn (Cubfest was
next to that one) which is getting 5 horse stalls. Still later he will
bring home a big trencher and we will run some longer water lines to some
pasture locations and install a few more field drains to get rid of some
lingering wet spots.
Osage Orange (hedge) sawed well on my saw mill when I was doing
that but it was really tricky to plane. The blades had to be very sharp and
the cut very very light or it would pull out chunks of wood sometimes as
deep as 3/16". Much of it was almost a burl. It sure is pretty when it all
works though. I don't know how long a really good Osage Orange post would
last, I don't think any good ones put in during the last 200 years have
ever rotted out yet... :-)
Cypress is not too common here but a good bit is brought in for
board fences since it holds up well. I believe much of it may come from
Southeastern Kentucky.
Rambling as usual...
Francis Robinson
Central Indiana, USA
robinson at svs.net
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