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Thread: Padauk phenomena

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2012
    Location
    Brenham, Tx
    Posts
    109

    Padauk phenomena

    I have cut, glued up, turned and finished a 10.5" diameter segmented bowl. It has 48 segments per ring. Each ring is composed of Padauk, Purpleheart, and Cherry. The different woods produce a geometric pattern on the bowl. I have finished it with thinned Fast Dry Poly. About six or seven coats. Light sanding between coats. The segments were cut on a wedgie sled, using Jerry Bennett's technique (making a straight line on one face and a squiggly line on another face). That means, every other segment's outer edge is from the opposite side of the board once a ring is made up.
    On some of the Padauk segments, something is wrong. I've never seen this before. The segment appears like it has not taken a finish. On some, the adjacent Padauck segment appears that it has taken a finish and the other hasn't. I can feel the change. The problem is isolated to only one segment (it does not cross the joint line). No other wood has this problem. The affected segment feels and looks dry (no sheen) and not slick like the others. This occurs on all rings at several, various/random places on the ring.
    Does anybody know what is happening?
    Did i describe the problem properly?
    Can it be fixed?

    Thanks.
    RP

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Harvey, Michigan
    Posts
    20,802
    Robert - a photo would help in analyzing the problem. Without seeing the segments in question - my first guess is that the wood is end-grain and as such is soaking in the finish more than the other pieces.
    Steve

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  3. #3
    I'll agree with Steve, it certainly sounds like end grain.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2012
    Location
    Brenham, Tx
    Posts
    109
    It's not edge grain. You don't have exposed end grain on segmented bowls, unless you want it that way.

    Thanks
    RP

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    lufkin tx
    Posts
    2,054
    Padauk is a very oily and waxey wood. Originally highly valued for its red dyes and fortunes were made exporting the stuff to Europe. Later valued as furniture, dock and warf timbers and railroad ties. Exremely rot resistant ect. All these oils, waxes and chemicals made it tough to finish at times. Forget oils like many tropicals. I have had good luck with lacquer and carnuba.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Southwestern Penna.
    Posts
    329
    When you flip a board in doing segmented turning there will be a grain change the wider the board often the greater the grain change will be. All of the segments from one side of the board should be kept together or in the same ring. It may not be end grain to you but the grain may be coming out one side of the board quite different from the other side. This happens quite a bit in woods with a lot figure.

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