hey you could put a hickory or cedar bowl in there to flavor your salmon at the same time!!! cedar smoked fish is delicious.
You and Chris come up with some of the best ideas!😉Thanks, Jamie. I'll give it a go shortly. I might try something with porous grain that dries easily and then another that I know would take forever to dry properly.
I'm thinking a pressure canner could go on your kitchen budget, and would in no way count toward your turning budget. 😉
We might just have to start a new thread. Do you think I could can some smoked salmon at the same time? 😀
Zach
With the pressure cooker, water boils at a lesser temperature, so I would guess less energy is used, but don't know of any king sized ones to put many bowls in rather than one or two.......
I'd be interested to hear more about the pressure cooker....
I turned about a dozen walnut bowls the other day and covered them all with Anchorseal, is there any reason why I can't put them in rubber totes or will that cause problems with the restricted air flow?
I turned about a dozen walnut bowls the other day and covered them all with anchorseal, is there any reason why I can't put them in rubber totes or will that cause problems with the restricted air flow?
It seems to me that when mold and mildew is most active, is around 18-20% MC. I normally don't see this with very wet roughed and sealed bowls with a high MC....until it dries out a bit....
... I do completely anchorseal all roughed bowls above 14% MC. The anchorseal is breathe-able, but does slow moisture evaporation considerably. It's my opinion that as much surface exposure as possible, along with air circulation is important.
... Sealing them with wax completely slows down the drying tremendously and doesn't cause mold. Sealing just the end grain portions is the best method if you want to slowly dry them but does increase the chances for checking. Sealing the endgrain and storing them where there isn't any sun or wind is about the best way.
thanks for the responses. I have turned my guest room into a drying room. blacked out the window and it stays at a steady 58-60 degrees in there most of the year and 44% humidity. I bought 3 of those 6' tall metal racks and put them up there today for drying racks. I have been coating the last 50 or so roughed out bowls fully in anchorseal and it seems to make all the difference so I believe that's going to be my method. I figure if I rough turn, coat in anchorseal and leave in my wood storage area for about 3 weeks to a month then I can bring them into my drying room after that. just started doing bowls in february and march so I don't have that many roughed out yet. red oak, white ash, black ash, hard maple, ambrosia maple, spalted hard and spalted red maple, basswood, walnut and a couple of burl vases and bowls so far. have some locust sitting outside that my ma brought me, have another half dozen ash, birch, and maple to do then I can start on those.
My reason for coating the entire piece rather than just end grain is ... when you think about it, on a round piece of cross-grain turned wood, there is exposed end-grain over the entire surface. You can say that part of it is predominantly side-grain and other parts are predominantly end-grain, but what is the line of demarcation between the two? Would any two people come up with the same answer? The rationale often given is that there is no moisture loss through side-grain and therefore no reason to apply Anchorseal. But, on the other hand, it does no harm to coat side-grain other than a few extra pennies worth of Anchorseal.