Walnut Catastrophe
Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2015 11:16 pm
Disappointment caps the coldest February I can remember here in Pennsylvania. I was awoke on the 28th by a phone call urging me to get to the shop post haste.
As I arrived I immediately noticed an ice flow trailing from the overhead door and down the drive. I was then greeted by this. That my friends is a Lincoln MKX encased in ice and subsequently frozen to the floor.
I entered the Building with a squish and immediately headed down stairs to asses the damage to our interim shop space; some 1900 sqft of previously empty basement, as well as, a single garage space adjacent the Lincoln taken up almost entirely by an industrial rack loaded with lumber and our large tools.
It seems a toilet feed line burst flooding seemingly everything I cared about.
The basement was a disaster.
100s of board feet of thirty year old Black walnut cut from the same tree in 8/4 and 4/4 thickness
several 7-10w" x4thick" x 8' long 10/4 walnut glueups
an especially fine 6' stick of 16/4 walnut 9' wide
scores of bdft of spaulted maple
a walnut Roubo frame
300bdft of prime Pennsylvania cherry cut from a tree that was growing before the revolutionary war
an abundance of 16/4 redwood
my first all joinery table
and $8700 worth of tools
all saturated... fortunately I am fully insured against such losses and will recoup adequate reparations for the losses incurred.
Forgot to take a picture of the lumber rack in the garage it looked much like the Lincoln.
bad news: that wood wont be dry enough to use for a long time. With the commercial drying equipment I had to use to mitigate the loss, accelerated moisture exchange likely caused bad things to happen i.e. twist, ect. and probably fouled any incomplete joinery anyway. The roubo stretcher tenons are certainly not agreeing with their mortises anymore.
good news: I get to go shopping for lumber and tools. possibly a follow up post if its of any interest ( open to suggestions for single phase 220 table and bandsaws)
Here's to a early Spring,
Rob Shearer
As I arrived I immediately noticed an ice flow trailing from the overhead door and down the drive. I was then greeted by this. That my friends is a Lincoln MKX encased in ice and subsequently frozen to the floor.
I entered the Building with a squish and immediately headed down stairs to asses the damage to our interim shop space; some 1900 sqft of previously empty basement, as well as, a single garage space adjacent the Lincoln taken up almost entirely by an industrial rack loaded with lumber and our large tools.
It seems a toilet feed line burst flooding seemingly everything I cared about.
The basement was a disaster.
100s of board feet of thirty year old Black walnut cut from the same tree in 8/4 and 4/4 thickness
several 7-10w" x4thick" x 8' long 10/4 walnut glueups
an especially fine 6' stick of 16/4 walnut 9' wide
scores of bdft of spaulted maple
a walnut Roubo frame
300bdft of prime Pennsylvania cherry cut from a tree that was growing before the revolutionary war
an abundance of 16/4 redwood
my first all joinery table
and $8700 worth of tools
all saturated... fortunately I am fully insured against such losses and will recoup adequate reparations for the losses incurred.
Forgot to take a picture of the lumber rack in the garage it looked much like the Lincoln.
bad news: that wood wont be dry enough to use for a long time. With the commercial drying equipment I had to use to mitigate the loss, accelerated moisture exchange likely caused bad things to happen i.e. twist, ect. and probably fouled any incomplete joinery anyway. The roubo stretcher tenons are certainly not agreeing with their mortises anymore.
good news: I get to go shopping for lumber and tools. possibly a follow up post if its of any interest ( open to suggestions for single phase 220 table and bandsaws)
Here's to a early Spring,
Rob Shearer