using my milled wood -- board and batten siding

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MR4WD

MR4WD

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More pics. I had planned all year to go out in the fall and mill up a bunch of boards for batten siding on my shed.

I was thinking of milling fir in 3/4~1/2" thickness though.
 
tomtrees58

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j5lfm8.jpg
 
mtngun

mtngun

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Wow, I am drooling over Tom's stack of oak boards. :heart::heart::heart: Thanks for posting those pics.

Looks like you are in need of a drying shed, and some sealer for the ends. Those boards are checking pretty bad at the ends.

Nice chain sharpening setup, by the way.
 
tomtrees58

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Wow, I am drooling over Tom's stack of oak boards. :heart::heart::heart: Thanks for posting those pics.

Looks like you are in need of a drying shed, and some sealer for the ends. Those boards are checking pretty bad at the ends.

Nice chain sharpening setup, by the way.

no i found that if you nail the wood up wet it works better let it dry no to much checking i cut the wood over size the trim to fit thanks tom trees:cheers:
 
BIG JAKE

BIG JAKE

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Finished siding on the rear gable end. Nothing fancy, but perhaps some day my grandchildren will brag about how about how grandpa made those boards with his bare hands (and a Stihl chainsaw). Plus, this wood was salvaged from local blown down trees that would have otherwise rotted. It doesn't get much more environmentally friendly than that.
rear_gable_siding.jpg

Looks good mtngun-how'd you get the concrete so straight and even with the log ends without coating the log ends? BTW looks like God's country-nice place you have there!
 
mtngun

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Looks good mtngun-how'd you get the concrete so straight and even with the log ends without coating the log ends? BTW looks like God's country-nice place you have there!

The secret is ..... take the picture from a distance, LOL!. The cordwood wall started out pretty rough and not-so-straight but practice makes perfect and it got better as I worked my way up the wall. After some experimentation, I settled on letting the log ends protrude 1/4", just enough to give the wall a little texture and provide a corner for chinking. Some people prefer to make it flush with the wall, though.

Not God's country, more like ranching country as I am surrounded by large ranches and their cows and goats and the flies that go with them, but it's as close as I will come to God's country until I win the lottery.

Tom Trees, I was referring to the checking on the stacked boards. Your siding is handsome, but the oak in the stack is begging for a little TLC.
 
mad murdock

mad murdock

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Milled up some WRC BnB for a renovation project this summer. turned out nice!
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one of my "hired hands(older son)"
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we actually milled all the timbers, studs and 2x6 floor joists of doug fir. will have to get some more interior pics up later
 
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