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Bill Sutherland
03-20-2016, 9:31 AM
I’ve got a bunch of pallets that I cut up to make a outdoor “Workbench” and yesterday I was running one of the shorter pieces through my Ridgid jointer and ended up with some really dull blades. What the heck to they make these pallets with. Nailing into the pallets was really difficult and drilling was also a pretty good challenge. My blades were sharp but wow this stuff is tough.

Gerry Grzadzinski
03-20-2016, 9:34 AM
Was the wood dirty? Dirt can ruin blades in a hurry.

Mark Mallia
03-20-2016, 9:50 AM
Or possibly minerals in the wood from the tree drinking hard water.

Bill Sutherland
03-20-2016, 9:59 AM
No the wood was pretty clean.

Cody Colston
03-20-2016, 10:32 AM
Pallet wood, depending on where the pallets came from, can be just about anything. You probably got a piece of high silica content wood...something like Teak, perhaps.

peter gagliardi
03-20-2016, 10:34 AM
Could be anything. You probably don't even know if this is a domestic or foreign pallet? I ask, because foreign pallets are frequently made of some low grade, but otherwise precious woods- i have scavenged purpleheart , teak, and even ipe from some. There are many woods that are quite abrasive- teak being high on that list due to the silica content.
Domestic woods are fewer that are abrasive, but locust comes to mind.
Any pics?

Andrew Hughes
03-20-2016, 11:12 AM
I wonder if it was Apitong.Is it reddish brown?.Its very dense,and harder than Chinese arithmetic.

Bill Sutherland
03-20-2016, 1:15 PM
I'll see if I can get some pictures of f what it looks like. When I used the pallets to make my outdoor workbench I could hardly drive a nail into it. Makes for a great outdoor workbench.

Bill Sutherland
03-20-2016, 8:47 PM
334170This is the tough little bugger.

Allan Speers
03-20-2016, 8:51 PM
^ That surely does resemble Teak.

Bill Sutherland
03-20-2016, 9:04 PM
A few guys on another forum said they thought maybe Red Oak.

Jim Becker
03-20-2016, 9:44 PM
If it is teak, that could 'splain things...teak has a bit of silica in it and it's murder on cutting edges.

Bill Sutherland
03-20-2016, 10:20 PM
I have a Ridgid Jointer and it now needs blades sharpened. I guess that may be good because I have a Edge Pro that has the attachment for jointer blades so we'll see how well it works.

Mike Henderson
03-20-2016, 10:39 PM
If you got teak, you got a deal, even with the dulled blades. Around here teak is extremely expensive.

Mike

Ronald Blue
03-20-2016, 10:47 PM
Looks like red oak to me and oak is a commonly used pallet wood in the U.S. But they are often whatever junk wood is abundant in an area. Some pallets are barely adequate to survive one use and some are built well enough to be used repeatedly.

Andrew Hughes
03-20-2016, 11:21 PM
Naw that's not teak.Plus teak isn't that hard it just full of sand and oils that dull blades like nothing.
Looks like oak to me.

Rollie Kelly
03-21-2016, 10:11 AM
Andrew, is Chinese arithmetic harder than woodpecker lips?

lowell holmes
03-21-2016, 11:34 AM
This string reminds me of a fellow who owned and engineering company and had money to spend for building a sport fishing boat.
He went to Costa Rica and bought a teak tree and made lumber from it. Can you imagine such a thing?:) He used the lumber to
trim the boat.

Simon Dupay
03-22-2016, 12:39 AM
its red oak not teak

Howard Acheson
03-22-2016, 11:09 AM
Grit and dirt are a common component of pallets. You have no way of knowing what the pallets were sitting on when they were stacked. The weight will grind grit into the surface of the wood. When you plane or cut the wood, the grit will dull tooling very quickly. It's a good reason not to use pallet wood unless you can examine carefully it with a magnifying glass to determine how dirty it is.

Personally, I never use pallet wood.

Rob Damon
03-22-2016, 1:53 PM
Some things to consider with Pallet wood:

http://www.1001pallets.com/pallet-safety/