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phinds last won the day on May 15
phinds had the most liked content!
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Gender
Male
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Location
central New York state (Cortland)
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Woodworking Interests
turning (bowls), identification of different woods
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phinds's Achievements

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zero possibility that this is any kind of maple http://www.hobbithouseinc.com/personal/woodpics/_anatomy/diffuse porous/maple/_maple.htm Off the cuff, it looks a bit like pecan/hickory but I'd need more information to tell. Can you show the face grain? What's the density?
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Definitely my favorite as well
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phinds started following Vertical vs Horizontal , couple of candle holders , great wood find and 4 others
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Picked up some really nice canary wood recently and here are a couple of candle holders turned from one piece of each plank. Finish so far is just a couple of applications of clear stain. Not sure what topcoat I'll use on them. Red streaked one, about 5" diameter yellow one, about 3.5" diameter
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Absolutely none of that on Wood Barter. Just friendly banter, good woodworking advice, and frequent drool-worth pics of wood plus the buying/selling and trading of wood. I tried both of the forums you mentioned, quite some time back, and quickly gave up on them both. I like this forum for sure but it's very light in terms of traffic and WB is much more heavily populated so I spend most of my time there.
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I'm surprised no one has mentioned Wood Barter. For me it's a like having a whole crew in the shop with me. WAY more posts than here and the same kind of camaraderie, plus a lot of buying and selling and trading of wood. I don't do facebook or twitter or any of the social media crap, but I spend a huge amount of time on Wood Barter (full disclosure, I moderate the wood identification forum). You guys should try it out. Woodtalkonline is a good forum but the traffic is too low to get people's attention.
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Coop, just FYI, and you are probably already aware, African mahogany ranges from pretty bland and boring to gorgeous ribbon stripe. Here's one side of a dulcimer case I made a long time ago. The full set of pics is on my site.
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The truncated rays in the second pic are a sure sign of reaction wood so you had that going against you in addition to it just being green. http://www.hobbithouseinc.com/personal/woodpics/_discussion_truncatedrays.htm
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Coop, it's a pretty common wood and it's actually a cypress but most folks refer to it as a cedar and that's how I have it on my site. http://www.hobbithouseinc.com/personal/woodpics/cedar, alaskan yellow.htm but as for IDing a specific piece, no. A lot of softwoods all look pretty much the same in the end grain (pine does tend to have larger resin canals). All I can say is that your wood definitely could be Alaskan yellow cedar.
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Saw this sitting on a shelf when I was looking for stuff for my grandson to play with. He loved it 'cause he could get his finger all the way into the smallest hole and I can't. Anyway, I've always thought of this as THE test run for when you first get your Forstner bits but it occurred to me that perhaps some folks hadn't ever seen one so I thought I'd put it up here just for grins. They do look pretty cool. My daughter asked me how I got the squares inside and it took me a minute to figure out what she was talking about but it DOES look like there are cubes inside cubes because of the way it's cut. I didn't make any attempt to clean this up (you can still see centering pencil marks) as it literally WAS just a test run for my Forstner bits way many years ago. They're easy to make, if a bit tedious. The only trick is keeping it centered for every cut. Each of the six faces all look exactly like the one shown straight-on.
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Exactly. Here's my setup. Different height compartments make optimum use of space for various sized planks How my numbering system got so screwed up on the SketchUp layout I don't know. Just stupidity I guess.
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I store a lot of my exotic planks vertically. No problems.
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But not at HF, right?
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Be more aggressive. Walk in the front door and ask.