As I've been shaping and hollowing PLANET MESQUITE, I've had to get familiar with some datapoints and made some calculations that some may find interesting. To refresh, PLANET MESQUITE is a 32.5" diameter globe of mistletoe-burl mesquite - there are a few pics on the forum.
All comments, corrections and critiques are welcome:
All comments, corrections and critiques are welcome:
- The circumference is 102" which yields a diameter a bit over 32" - volume is about 10-cu ft
- With the current internal radius of 14", the air-volume is 6.65-cu ft
- Mesquite has an "avg dry weight of 51-lbs/cu ft and the specific gravity is .82 @ 12% MC (wood database)
- Hollowing has produced 330-gal of shavings (six 55-gal trash cans)
- 7.48-gal / cu. ft. calculates to 49.74 cu.ft of shavings (330-gal)
- Conclusion: 6.65 cu ft of solid mesquite = 49.74 cu ft of shavings (about 7.5X) - other species that produce longer shavings would be much more - probably 10X the solid volume or greater.
- QUESTION: Knowing mesquite is 51-lbs/cu-ft @ 12%MC, what would it be at 30%MC? (30% is a guess based on the the bound-water content). I'm assuming 65-lbs/cu-ft @ 30%MC
- I realize that's a guess on top of a guess - YOUR THOUGHTS?????
- At 2" thickness (3.28 cu-ft of wood), the piece weighs about 215-lbs (30%MC)
- At the 1" thickness (1.75 cu-ft) and 12%MC it should weigh approx 93-lbs. Considering the number of large openings, it should be in the 70-lb to 75-lb range