I think it would be easier to sell smaller pieces, and ship them too.
I think it would be easier to sell smaller pieces, and ship them too.
Be the kind of woman that when your feet hit the ground each morning, the devil says, "oh crap she's up!"
Tolerance is giving every other human being every right that you claim for yourself.
"What is man without the beasts? If all the beasts are gone, men would die from great loneliness of spirit. For whatever happens to the beasts will happen to man. All things are connected. " Chief Seattle Duwamish Tribe
The thing about wood is you just can't tell what is inside a bowl blank. That makes paying for shipping a real crap shoot. Besides, unless you coat the blanks with wax, they will degrade quickly into firewood. Two thoughts, try Craig's List for local pick up or maybe you want to become a hero to your local turners club and give them away. I guarantee you'll make a lot of friends.By the way, nice parallel cuts on those blanks.
Most turners who turn big wood, have means of getting it local. They also don't want to pay for the shipping. Now if that was burl, we wood be talking a different story. Good Luck on the shipping.
Probably difficult to sell for anything other than fire wood. The one on the tailgate looks like it has a big crack coming off the pith down through most of the piece. The problem with using a bandsaw mill to cut them up it that you can't selectively cut each round. They are bigger than most people want.
robo hippy
If you have one buyer who will take the lot, then toss em on a skid and freight the whole thing.
but even that will run $300+, so most people wont pay that and might not be worth your time & effort.
I've played with that idea before, but concluded that it has be to pretty valuable wood, available real cheap to make the shipping worth while.
So then I'd receive 1000# of wood, turn it into 100# of finished product. sigh...
Unfortunately, you're about 9 hrs away, or I might volunteer to pick them up with my trailer
Oh wait, I still have a few 1000 lbs of maple blanks that are thawing out.
Its a shame to let it go to waste though..
I won't let it go to waste.
I've already got them all Anchorsealed.
I'm leaning towards chainsawing them down, to fit in 12" x 12" x 8" boxes.
From the left side of my brain...
Now about turning legs, sticking them on the bottom and making them into end tables / coffee tables.
Similar to this: http://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/001...rande.jpg?4481
You might be able to sell them for a lot more $$$
I purchase 99% of my blanks - the vast majority online. Most of them are 12x12x4 and sometimes 12x12x5. I cut them in quarters and tum hollow forms that wind up being about 5.5" in diameter, which I think is a popular size. The folks from which I have purchased, advertise free shipping. They merely put the blanks in a USPS flat rate box. I buy mostly cherry and ambrosia maple. A 12x12x5 blank of cherry sells for $50. Perhaps that pricing will help you gauge the profitability of doing it in this manner.
Regards,
Glen
Woodworking: It's a joinery.
palletize and send via freight if you can find a buyer.
Fastenal has reasonably price third party logistics:
https://www.fastenal.com/en/22/third...tics-%283pl%29