What are you building with your milled wood? merged

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Sold a 5200. Used scrap oak lumber milled from a tree the 5200 cut down to make a shipping box for the saw. Final shipping weight 60 lbs. Cost $36 to ship. Didn't think that was too bad.

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Spent the weekend keeping an eye on my boys "Dad! Sawyer spilled a bowl of beefaroni all over Grandpa's couch" and in between putting out the little fires got started on shop milling slabs into face frame and solid panel stock. White Ash loaded with feather grain/tiger stripes. This is a paying job.

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Target project. The tops and footboards will be solid Ash with an Ebony/esspresso finish. Won' be quite this big.

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I posted some of these in a different thread, but here's pictures of some projects I've made recently.

Great work! This is exactly why I'm getting into chainsaws and mills. I just got a 066. The 36" bar and alaskan 776 is in the mail. Along with a ripping chain.

I milled some cottonwood. I know it's not the greatest wood to work with, but it was such a big old tree trunk I simply couldn't waste it. As long as it stays out of the weather it should do great. They used to build barns with cottonwood back in the day.

Sorry tangent.

I'll try and put up a photo. The wood is still drying...can't make anything with it until it dries. It ought to shrink a lot.
 
A little more progress on the barn.

Wind bracing and girts. That's what takes all the time.
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Then the siding goes pretty fast.
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One more wall of siding remaining, then the outside will be done. Still lots of bracing to do on the inside, though. I've got about $2500 into it.

It is #####in. Am I allowed to say that?

Old Blue
 
swing set

this is a swing set that i'm building for my daughter. the roof and the walls are live edge pin oak. the pipe is 48 inch i.d.x 6 feet. and the rest i cheated and gave in and bought treated lumber. i have to hang the swings this weekend and thats about it. i built it so it can be torn down into a couple pieces for sale once my little girl out grows it. what do you guys think 10 bucks?!:msp_tongue:
 
I recently finished building this mesquite dining table for a client complete with turned bowls. It is 10' long by 48" wide by 12" thick.
There is a pictorial write up of building it on my website under the Building a Table tab. www.wix.com/billstuewe/billswoodshop

*I logged 112 hours working on this table over a six week time period, not including many hours of help from friends
99 ½ hours were spent grinding the bark and sapwood off, planing, epoxying, assembling and sanding the table, 12 ½ hours finishing it

*4 ½ gallons of epoxy were used to fill the cracks and voids and stabilize the punky areas. A quart of thin super glue was also used to solidify the punkiest areas prior to filling with epoxy

*8 coats of Waterlox were applied to all surfaces (approximately a gallon total) These were applied by hand, rubbed in, then wiped off, building the lustrous finish. After the final coat, the top was hand rubbed with 0000 steel wool, sanded through 1500grit sandpaper and then buffed
(Time-wise, 16 coats were applied because once 8 coats were applied and dry all the parts were turned over the other side was finished with 8 coats.)


http://www.arboristsite.com/attachments/milling-saw-mills/229145d1331867242-mesquite-table-bowls_5727-jpg



http://www.arboristsite.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=229143&d=1331866698
 
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I recently finished building this mesquite dining table for a client complete with turned bowls. It is 10' long by 48" wide by 12" thick.
There is a pictorial write up of building it on my website under the Building a Table tab.

*I logged 112 hours working on this table over a six week time period, not including many hours of help from friends
99 ½ hours were spent grinding the bark and sapwood off, planing, epoxying, assembling and sanding the table, 12 ½ hours finishing it

*4 ½ gallons of epoxy were used to fill the cracks and voids and stabilize the punky areas. A quart of thin super glue was also used to solidify the punkiest areas prior to filling with epoxy

*8 coats of Waterlox were applied to all surfaces (approximately a gallon total) These were applied by hand, rubbed in, then wiped off, building the lustrous finish. After the final coat, the top was hand rubbed with 0000 steel wool, sanded through 1500grit sandpaper and then buffed
(Time-wise, 16 coats were applied because once 8 coats were applied and dry all the parts were turned over the other side was finished with 8 coats.)


(I can never remember how to make the picture open in the reply automatically--if someone can fix it I would appreciate it.)



http://www.arboristsite.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=229143&d=1331866698

Fantastic ,
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Great Thread, makes me want to get into wood working, I did this coffee table top cross cut from a 120 foot pecan blowover in Montel TX, was a cross cut 20 ffeet up with bark was 52" now it has checked and bleached out from some kind of fungus should have dried it longer, have a friend in Beorne that mills wood on halfs when I run across stuff he wants is sitting on the logs from a couple of mesquite trees and he milled this cedar elm it is real hard has been in garage for 2 years and wore out 3 belts sanding it on both sides, thanks to all of the craftsman who have posted thier skill and knowledge,
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