[AT] OT Barn floor question
Larry D. Goss
rlgoss at evansville.net
Thu Oct 21 16:16:13 PDT 2004
I'll have to look up the receipts, but I seem to remember buying
something like 200 board feet of 1" rough cut lumber. Most of it was
five to seven inches wide for the tailfin boards and wheel vanes. I had
to resaw most of it to get it down thin enough for the vanes and
laminated hoops. I am NOT going to steam bend the wheel hoops. That
process is too hard to control. But I have a "table skirt" jig built of
angle iron and reinforced 3/4" plywood that lets me make laminated hoops
with a perfectly controlled circular curve. So the answer is: boards
need to be 5 to 7 inches wide and range in length from 4 to 7 feet.
Larry
-----Original Message-----
From: at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com
[mailto:at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com] On Behalf Of Bo Hinch
Sent: Thursday, October 21, 2004 2:23 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] OT Barn floor question
I have acess to cypress here in south louisiana , my question is what
size
do the boards need to be and last question , how big is your bank
account
???
Tell me your sizes and I will see if I can help you without you going
into
debt for the next 20 years .
Bo Hinch
----- Original Message -----
From: "Larry D. Goss" <rlgoss at evansville.net>
To: "'Antique tractor email discussion group'"
<at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Thursday, October 21, 2004 9:40 AM
Subject: RE: [AT] OT Barn floor question
> 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
>
>
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