woodhutt
2nd September 2021, 02:22 PM
Just when I thought I had time to get on with my own projects, my son dumped an old dining table on me for me to refinish. "It's only stained pine" he said as we off-loaded it from his ute just before we went into lockdown. "Bloody heavy pine", I thought.
Sure enough, after a few swipes over the legs with a finely set plane, I could see I was dealing with what I believe to be oak. I'm not great at timber recognition so I took the scientific approach. I weighed a leg which was 3 kgs. The leg is 0.75 m long x 0.075m sq. which equals 0.00416 cu.m. Given the weight, this works out to a density of 720 kg/cu.m. A check on line for timber densities confirmed that oak is around 750 kg/cu.m. while pine is little more than half that (excluding pitch pine which it isn't).
Here is a before/after pic:
500456
Cleaning up the legs also showed up some crude repairs. None of the arrises had been eased so there are multiple chunks knocked off the sharp corners as well as damage near the feet. I plan to rout these out and scarf in some new wood. I don't have any matching oak and can't get any due to lockdown so I though about using some cherry scraps I have which has some darker coloured heartwood and paler sapwood I should be able to get a close if not exact match. Then I'll run a small round-over bit along all the arrises to reduce the risk of future damage (and to protect the new grandson's head from damage now he's started crawling). The whole thing will be re-stained anyway to approximate a darker oak wall unit they have. Here are pics of the some of the original repairs:
500458500457
Any comments/suggestions gratefully received.
I'll cover the table top (which has it's own issues :C) in an update.
Pete
Sure enough, after a few swipes over the legs with a finely set plane, I could see I was dealing with what I believe to be oak. I'm not great at timber recognition so I took the scientific approach. I weighed a leg which was 3 kgs. The leg is 0.75 m long x 0.075m sq. which equals 0.00416 cu.m. Given the weight, this works out to a density of 720 kg/cu.m. A check on line for timber densities confirmed that oak is around 750 kg/cu.m. while pine is little more than half that (excluding pitch pine which it isn't).
Here is a before/after pic:
500456
Cleaning up the legs also showed up some crude repairs. None of the arrises had been eased so there are multiple chunks knocked off the sharp corners as well as damage near the feet. I plan to rout these out and scarf in some new wood. I don't have any matching oak and can't get any due to lockdown so I though about using some cherry scraps I have which has some darker coloured heartwood and paler sapwood I should be able to get a close if not exact match. Then I'll run a small round-over bit along all the arrises to reduce the risk of future damage (and to protect the new grandson's head from damage now he's started crawling). The whole thing will be re-stained anyway to approximate a darker oak wall unit they have. Here are pics of the some of the original repairs:
500458500457
Any comments/suggestions gratefully received.
I'll cover the table top (which has it's own issues :C) in an update.
Pete