Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I just got back from the local Saw Mill with a pretty good load in my Truck by the time I got rid of the trash I ended up with about 100 ft of Maple. the thickness was between 3/4 and 1 1/4 This  is green so It will have to be dried out . It probably won't be ready till next spring. I also got 16 ft. of Walnut 5/8 thick X 8 in. this is ready to be planed. I have some walnut and cherry that is left from what I got last year It. s ready to plain, With Saw Mill lumber yu need to get it one year in advance

Posted (edited)

Kevin these alr all scrap from the Mill it's the end pieces that are under 6 ' in length any long pieces are less than 1 in thick there not many pieces like that. but a 4 ' is ni;ce for me because they are easy to store. and they are FREE

Edited by ike
  • 1 month later...
Posted

I too am lucky to have a fantastic sawmill wood supplier. The guy I get it from manufacters tongue-in-groove hardwood floors. He has only hard wood... Walnut, maple, oak and birch. All of his wood is kiln dried even before he gets it. Each board can be anywhere between 4 1/2" and 8 or 9 inches wide and most are at least 8 1/2 feet long. Thickness is anywhere between 1" to 1 /2". My jointer and planer make easy work of milling the boards down to the desired size. I've never learned what a "board foot" is and so I can't tell you what I pay for one. On my last visit I told him to give me $100 worth of oak and $100 worth of birch. I came home with a truck load. I did an approximate tally and if it were bought already milled from a big box store the price would be well over $1,000 bucks. It is more than worth the extra work and time it takes to mill it! I am truly blesses by the lumber gods!

 

Bobby

Posted

Man, you're lucky. I think our closest lumber mill  might be the one you go to in Ohio. California doesn't have lumber mills anymore. I think they all moved to Japan. Or China. I envy you.

 

Ray

Posted

The saw mill here shipped lumber to china to make flooring and shipped back =here shipped back here. most of the wood I receive is 3 to 4 ft long hard woods  mostly Walnut Cherry  Ash and maple The biggest problem is I have to let it air dry for about a year

Posted

I have a mill/ Kiln drier near me. I buy what they call Kiln samples. They are used to check moisture content during the drying process. They range from 4-12 inches width and 3-4ft long all are 5/4 and cost me .75 cents each regardless of species. I have picke up some reall great deals on Walnut, Cherry, Oak, Poplar, Beech, Ash and Maple before. As said before the time it takes to resaw and mill is well worth the effort.

Posted

I too am lucky to have a fantastic sawmill wood supplier. The guy I get it from manufacters tongue-in-groove hardwood floors. He has only hard wood... Walnut, maple, oak and birch. All of his wood is kiln dried even before he gets it. Each board can be anywhere between 4 1/2" and 8 or 9 inches wide and most are at least 8 1/2 feet long. Thickness is anywhere between 1" to 1 /2". My jointer and planer make easy work of milling the boards down to the desired size. I've never learned what a "board foot" is and so I can't tell you what I pay for one. On my last visit I told him to give me $100 worth of oak and $100 worth of birch. I came home with a truck load. I did an approximate tally and if it were bought already milled from a big box store the price would be well over $1,000 bucks. It is more than worth the extra work and time it takes to mill it! I am truly blesses by the lumber gods!

 

Bobby

 

Bobby, a board foot is a piece of lumber that measures, 12"x 12"x 1", it can be either one piece or, a few pieces that add up to 12".

Len

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Sign Up Today!

    Sign in to experience everything SSV has to offer:

    • Forums
    • User Galleries
    • Member Blogs
    • Pattern Library with 4,300+ Free Scroll Saw Patterns!
    • Scroll Saw resources and reviews.
    • Pattern & Supplier Directories
    • and More!

  • Trending

×
×
  • Create New...