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was sawing some walnut and oak today - is walnut made of concrete???

Started by Andy B., September 14, 2013, 07:38:35 PM

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Andy B.

I had a chance to play around a little with my Alaskan chainsaw mill today.  I have a few old logs laying around and figured they would be good to practice on.  The walnut log has been laying alongside my garage for at least 5 years, and the oak ones were on a pile for probably almost as long.  I wasn't expecting to really get much usable wood, just to see how the saw cut.  The logs were all around 6-7 feet long.

The first log I cut was a white oak.  It wasn't too bad.  The second log was the walnut.  Holy smokes!  It probably took three times as long to make a cut as the oak log, and the oak I cut into an 18" wide square cant.  The walnut was still round and about 14".  I thought maybe it was just the white oak, so the second log I cut was red oak, about the same size as the white oak log.  Same as the white oak, I went through the red oak a lot faster than the walnut.

Being new to sawing up logs, I just figured oak would be difficult to cut and walnut would be easy.  I was sadly mistaken.

One other neat thing was the oak had lots of shake and some checking, but the walnut had zero shake, almost no checking, and no rot.  I was very surprised by that considering the walnut log was laying in a somewhat damp area for so many years.  All of the bark was gone from it.

Anyway, just some random observations from a newbie.

Andy B.

beenthere

Black walnut heartwood will last a long time on the ground. I've retrieved good walnut heartwood from logs laying 10+ years.
No explanation for your experience having a hard time cutting the walnut, compared to the oaks.

But the walnut shouldn't be harder to saw, I'd think.
south central Wisconsin
It may be that my sole purpose in life is simply to serve as a warning to others

George Walnut

Was there much stress in the log? Could be excess stress that was giving you a hard time cutting?

WDH

I bet that the oak had more decay and was not as sound as the walnut, given that walnut heartwood will not decay very fast at all.  The lumber from many old walnut logs, once sawn, looks like it came from a green log. 
Woodmizer LT40HDD35, John Deere 2155, Kubota M5-111, Kubota L2501, Nyle L53 Dehumidification Kiln, and a passion for all things with leafs, twigs, and bark.  hamsleyhardwood.com


drobertson

On old logs, switch bands after the slab cuts, pretty much a given,  if you cut the white oak and kept the same blade for the walnut this would explain allot,  david
only have a few chain saws I'm not suppose to use, but will at times, one dog Dolly, pretty good dog, just not sure what for yet,  working on getting the gardening back in order, and kinda thinking on maybe a small bbq bizz,  thinking about it,

Andy B.

Thanks for the info guys.

The oaks didn't have much rot, it was mainly a lot of shake, but I guess that could have had something to do with it.

I really couldn't tell you about stress in a log.  I'm totally new at this, so unless the log started bending like a potato chip, it all just looks like flat boards to me.  :D  The walnut did have some branches on it and the oak was all relatively smooth-grained logs with no branches.  Maybe that was the difference.  I always think of oak as being something tough, but I am learning from reading here that there are many more woods more difficult to mill than oak.

I wish I had a bandsaw mill with bands to change, but sadly it's just me, the Alaskan chainsaw mill, and a Stihl MS660.   :(  Someday it might be nice to have a bandsaw mill.

Andy B.

Gasawyer

the only thing I think is your chain might have been dulled a little by the rot on the walnut? Just a thought. Keep sawing you learn what to expect, but the there will be surprises. It keeps it interesting!
Woodmizer LT-40hdd super hyd.,Lucas 618,Lucas 823dsm,Alaskian chainsaw mill 6',many chainsaws large and small,NH L555 skidsteer, Int. TD-9,JD500 backhoe, and International grapple truck.

terrifictimbersllc

Sounds like dull chain.  Walnut is easy to cut if it is moist. 
DJ Hoover, Terrific Timbers LLC,  Mystic CT Woodmizer Million Board Foot Club member. 2019 LT70 Super Wide 55 Yanmar,  LogRite fetching arch, WM BMS250 sharpener/BMT250 setter.  2001 F350 7.3L PSD 6 spd manual ZF 4x4 Crew Cab Long Bed

drobertson

Andy, my bad on the saw type, not sure what you could have going on,  maybe give the chain a little fuzz with a file,    david
only have a few chain saws I'm not suppose to use, but will at times, one dog Dolly, pretty good dog, just not sure what for yet,  working on getting the gardening back in order, and kinda thinking on maybe a small bbq bizz,  thinking about it,

outerbanxer

You really need a ripping chain, makes all the difference in the world, And you do have to sharpen it every pass on a big log like that.

Gasawyer

Outerbanxer if you need to sharpen after every pass on that small of log you need better chain or something. Because I have run one chain 12 passes to slab up a 3 to 4' diameter10' long red oak log and didn't need to sharpen to complete the job. Most of the time you find metal and need to change the chain at least once a log. Just my experience.
Woodmizer LT-40hdd super hyd.,Lucas 618,Lucas 823dsm,Alaskian chainsaw mill 6',many chainsaws large and small,NH L555 skidsteer, Int. TD-9,JD500 backhoe, and International grapple truck.

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