Just wondering what's your favorite wood and why? I really like Teak. The oils in it make it cut like sharp shears and a hide of Connoly leather. It just feels good.
Just wondering what's your favorite wood and why? I really like Teak. The oils in it make it cut like sharp shears and a hide of Connoly leather. It just feels good.
What you listen to is your business....what you hear is ours.
OAK!!! What else?
Success is the sum of Failure and Learning
Cocobolo, bocote, and curly eucalyptus.
Nancy
Nancy Laird
Owner - D&N Specialties, Rio Rancho, New Mexico
Woodworker, turner, laser engraver; RETIRED!
Lasers - ULS M-20 (20W) & M-360 (40W), Corel X4 and X3
SMC is user supported. http://www.sawmillcreek.org/donate.php
___________________________
It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice.
Mesquite. There is always a suprise inside !
941.44 miles South of Steve Schlumph
TURN SAFE
Hackberry, Poplar, and Cherry.
Oh yea...add some Pecan in there too.
Thanks & Happy Wood Chips,
Dennis -
Get the Benefits of Being an SMC Contributor..!
....DEBT is nothing more than yesterday's spending taken from tomorrow's income.
Mesquite and Walnut.
Bernie
Never put off until tomorrow what you can do the day after tomorrow.
To succeed in life, you need three things: a wishbone, a backbone and a funnybone.
FREE WOOD! Because it is FREE.
Cherry, black walnut, ash and spalted maple...as well as anything "burl"...
--
The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
Lace Sheoak, Green Jarrah (and burl) Goldfields burl, and Marri
Why do they say "an alarm going off," if it is really going on?
Joash
Myrtlewood
Trying to eliminate sandpaper - one curly shaving at a time.
The kind that turns.
Only the Blue Roads
Hey Bill, I like Cherry, Mesquite and Poplar with a white creamy color and green streaks best. Cocobolo is very nice to turn, but it's a bit pricey, so I like "found" woods best overall. Jude
Cherry, especially free.
It varies on each "project".
I love most rosewoods (especially honduran and cocobolo) and most Aussie burls like red mallee, red morrel, brown mallee, yellow box, etc. Amboyna, desert ironwood, olivewood, koa, cherry, manzanita, maple, myrtlewood, bubinga, afzelia, chittam, pink ivory, buckeye, locust, mesquite, yew, TX mt. laurel, blackwood, box elder, etc. etc.
It is the biggest advantage of penturning, you can try various woods (mostly burl or highly figured) and still not break the bank.
For bowls and bigger turnings, I mostly use local woods (Mesquite, Huisache, TX Ebony, Maple)...not because they are my favorite but because of financial limitations.
Dario
Hard Maple is my favorite followed by Cherry.