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Drying lumber in climate controlled building

Started by Kylewh94, January 05, 2025, 02:50:29 PM

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Kylewh94

Rather than building and operating a kiln, can lumber be dried in a building that is climate controlled to achieve kiln dried MC? Say, kept at 70 and 40% humidity with a normal heating/cooling system and dehumidifier. I imagine it would take a while but would be somewhere between air drying and a kiln time wise. 

Something would have to be figured out for sterilization.

Would this dry wood too quick? Does this in general just not work?

Just something I've been thinking about.

Thank you

YellowHammer

Sure, but ....the vapors coming off wood, especially hardwood is pretty acidic.  I've seen it eat through 1/4" ion a few years, imagine what it will do to your building's air conditioner system?  Kilns are design for it, with lots stainless steel and ceramic covered components.

Also, for every 1000 lbs of wet wood, 500 lbs of water needs to come out if it is green.  That's also pretty hard on your HVAC system

YellowHammerisms:

Take steps to save steps.

If it won't roll, its not a log; it's still a tree.  Sawmills cut logs, not trees.

Kiln drying wood: When the cookies are burned, they're burned, and you can't fix them.

Sawing is fun for the first couple million boards.

Be smarter than the sawdust

doc henderson

It works.  I have a 20-foot container that has four doors down a side.  I use cheap walmart fans, and a wm dehumidifier.  I half dry and half store wood in it.  It gets it down to 7%.  If not adding wood, I can run the DH once a month for a day or so and keep it all dry.  I would not load it full of wet stuff.  air dry goes in.  and if fresh wood is in, I get about 5 gallons a day of water coming out.  been going about 5 years.   the temp is whatever the sun does that day.  It was recommended that I paint it black.
Timber king 2000, 277c track loader, PJ 32 foot gooseneck, 1976 F700 state dump truck, JD 850 tractor.  2007 Chevy 3500HD dually, home built log splitter 18 horse 28 gpm with 5 inch cylinder and 32 inch split range with conveyor powered by a 12 volt tarp motor

scsmith42

The problem with what you're proposing is that the lumber may dry too quickly, and you won't be able to sterilize it.  If it's a fast drying species such as pine or poplar, you'd probably be ok.

If you tried to dry 8/4 oak that way, you'd get a lot of surface checking due to the low RH% in the building.
Peterson 10" WPF with 65' of track
Smith - Gallagher dedicated slabber
Tom's 3638D Baker band mill
and a mix of log handling heavy equipment.

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