Steps For Making Standard Stabilized Wood

By Paul Thomas


The furniture industry is among the most important industries that homeowners, institutions, and business people seek every day. However, the industry is under threat due to the continued ban on timber harvesting across the globe from the ongoing climate change fight goes on. As carpenters have no option but to salvage any piece of timber that they have to make items that their customers need. The costs and unavailability of these products leave investors in these industries with no other option but to use available timber. Here is how you can simply make stabilized wood at your workshop.

Stabilization of timber involves taking soft pieces and injecting them with resin to form a hardened and stable blank that will be safe for turning. The use of resin is to displace the air pockets on the timber grain structure hence creating blanks that are invulnerable to moisture change and can absorb high gloss polishes.

People who have never worked with stabilized pieces may find it cumbersome to undertake the procedure. The initial step is assembling the pieces and drying them. For resins to get through to the innermost part of timber, it must be dry and with no moisture. As such, putting your pieces in a rack where hot sun rays will heat them for a few days will significantly lower their moisture content.

After all the blanks have dried to relevant moisture levels, you can begin the stabilization process. Assemble the kits including anti-float plates, a vacuuming generator, steel pots and inner chamber. The blanks will be placed in the inner chamber where it will be filled with resins. The apparatus ensures that the blanks get soaked with your preferred materials.

After 30 minutes of a running vacuum generator, your timber will be soaked with the resins and ready for another stage. However, you must check whether the blanks are floating or not because when you find them floating, it means they are not yet soaked as required. The procedure can be repeated for another half hour to ensure that every part of the blank is soaked. Complete the process by removing the blanks from the pots and cleaning it to prevent gumming up of resins and other wastes.

The soaking process does not mean that the blanks are ready for use. They must be cured to ensure that they do not have some loopholes. Curing is done on ovens or toasters which can disseminate temperatures of about 200 degrees. Dry them on this apparatus for some minutes until no moisture can be traced. For a safe cure, you ought to wrap each blank when drying it at the oven.

Is this the only way that a blank can be stabilized? No. Some traditional methods are available although they are tedious and might be time consuming for people who are new to it. Cheap commercial chemicals like wood hardeners are accessible from shops whereby they can be painted into pieces. However, their quality is low when compared to the above process.

Carpenters need woods that are stabilized for their day to day activities which makes it essential to learn these tricks. Purchasing the prepared blanks might cost you handsomely whereas making them is simple. By doing the process at your workplace, you will save costs and make high-quality items.




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