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Thread: Wood ID help!

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
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    Elkhart, IN
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    Wood ID help!

    Sorry I forgot to get a couple photos of the bark or end grain of the piece before I started turning it. But, does anyone have an idea of the wood species? At first I thought it was walnut - But it didn't have the thick bark that the black walnut around here has. I don’t think it's english walnut as this is more reddish brown than the other english walnut pieces I have. By the way, this does have one coat of minwax antique oil on it which darkened it a bit.

    IMG_3468.jpgIMG_3470.jpgIMG_3471.jpgIMG_3472.jpgIMG_3474.jpg

    Thanks!!!
    Ricc
    Last edited by Ricc Havens; 03-18-2020 at 5:42 PM. Reason: Adding info for clarification

  2. #2
    Any chance it is apple? What is left of the bark and the heartwood kind of look like it.

  3. #3
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    My first thought is redbud. Looks a lot like some that I got from my back yard after a wind storm.
    Tom
    The hurrier I goes, the behinder I gets.

  4. #4
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    sykesville, maryland
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    Could also be hickory. How hard is it? Hickory is pretty wicked hard.

  5. #5
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    Dec 2006
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    Morrisonville, NY
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    I don’t think it’s apple, I’m with hickory. Apple is beautiful but so unstable.

  6. #6
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    I don't thinks it's hickory as it wasn't wicked hard and it's not as light colored as the other few pieces of hickory that I have. Might be apple. a local orchard last year was clearing a section of their land to replant a different crop. A friend grabbed a few chunks and brought me a couple pieces. this may have been one of those he gave me that I forgot to label. But, on the other hand, I know apple is unstable and prone to cracking and this piece did have a few small cracks I had to turn past and work around but not the extreme cracking a couple of the other pieces did.

    Any other input??

    Thanks
    Ricc

  7. #7
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    Walnut has a chambered pith, meaning that the very center of a stem is hollow except for some membranes that create a series of chambers. I can't see for sure, but the pith does not look like walnut.

    Apple has the high sapwood/heartwood contrast, but all the pieces I've ever turned have had heartwood that is more red than how the color appears in the photos (which can be deceiving).

    Best,

    Dave

  8. #8
    Join Date
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    Northern MN
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    Here's a picture of a walnut twig showing the chambered pith. The pith is usually about 1/8" across.


  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
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    Morrisonville, NY
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    I see a lot of apple, it’s really hard to find a piece that size that hasn’t checked or cracked. The apple I’ve seen has a color more like cherry and has a very distinct smell when turned.
    I have also seen a lot of hickory a the local cabinet shop where I get a lot of wood. The contrasting sap and heartwood I’ve seen in hickory cabinets is just like your turning.

  10. #10
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    #1 - look closely at the end grain. Look at the end grain If it's ring porous that will eliminate a lot of possibilities. The Wood Database includes an "Endgrain" paragraph and a photo of the end grain of each species. Use it to narrow down the choices. Since you lost the bark and don't have leaves this is your best chance at ID.

    You can still easily look at the end grain if you have a small scrap, perhaps from the tenon of the turning. Shave the end grain with a single-edged razor blade following the instructions on the wood ID page of the Wood Database website. Examine with a hand magnifier.

    If no scrap piece remains, use a magnifier to look at the finished end grain in your turning. The pores will be clogged with sawdust and finish but the difference between ring porous and diffuse porous will probably be obvious.

    Here is a photo of a well-prepared sample of one of the hickories. Hickory is ring porous.
    hickory1.jpg

    This is a photo of the end grain of Apple. Apple is diffuse porous. Entirely different structure.
    apple.jpg

    Other distinguishing things that require experience to judge are relative density and smell.

    Many, many species have dark heartwood and light sapwood. Specific pieces of even a known species can vary widely in color so that can be a hint but is not a reliable indicator. Look at the woodpics at hobbithouseinc.com to appreciate the variation in appearance.

    I use microscopes to examine the end grain and count the cell width of the rays, check for fluorescence with UV light, and occasionally use chemical tests. You can also send a sample to the US government for ID and they will do all the hard work for free.

    Whether a particular sample quickly develops cracks depends on so many factors I never even consider it. The relative stability of end grain turnings is difficult to judge since it doesn't warp the same way as face grain turnings.

    JKJ



    Quote Originally Posted by Ricc Havens View Post
    Sorry I forgot to get a couple photos of the bark or end grain of the piece before I started turning it. But, does anyone have an idea of the wood species? At first I thought it was walnut - But it didn't have the thick bark that the black walnut around here has. I don’t think it's english walnut as this is more reddish brown than the other english walnut pieces I have. By the way, this does have one coat of minwax antique oil on it which darkened it a bit.

    IMG_3468.jpgIMG_3470.jpgIMG_3471.jpgIMG_3472.jpgIMG_3474.jpg

    Thanks!!!
    Ricc

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Elkhart, IN
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    431
    John, I don't have a high powered loop or magnifier. I did find a chunk in the trash from the cut off and tried to cut a slice with a razor blade. Couldn't get a good slice as the wood was hard and the blade would just cut small chunks not a nice thin slice. But, I used my air hoes to blow out the end grain as much as possible and used my Iphone at 10X zoom with a tripod to hopefully get slightly better photos than in my first post. Not sure it will help or not but here they are.

    Thanks
    Ricc
    IMG_3479.jpgIMG_3478.jpgIMG_3483.JPGIMG_3497.JPGIMG_3505.JPGIMG_3513.JPG



    Quote Originally Posted by John K Jordan View Post
    #1 - look closely at the end grain. Look at the end grain If it's ring porous that will eliminate a lot of possibilities. The Wood Database includes an "Endgrain" paragraph and a photo of the end grain of each species. Use it to narrow down the choices. Since you lost the bark and don't have leaves this is your best chance at ID.

    You can still easily look at the end grain if you have a small scrap, perhaps from the tenon of the turning. Shave the end grain with a single-edged razor blade following the instructions on the wood ID page of the Wood Database website. Examine with a hand magnifier.

    If no scrap piece remains, use a magnifier to look at the finished end grain in your turning. The pores will be clogged with sawdust and finish but the difference between ring porous and diffuse porous will probably be obvious.

    Here is a photo of a well-prepared sample of one of the hickories. Hickory is ring porous.
    hickory1.jpg

    This is a photo of the end grain of Apple. Apple is diffuse porous. Entirely different structure.
    apple.jpg

    Other distinguishing things that require experience to judge are relative density and smell.

    Many, many species have dark heartwood and light sapwood. Specific pieces of even a known species can vary widely in color so that can be a hint but is not a reliable indicator. Look at the woodpics at hobbithouseinc.com to appreciate the variation in appearance.

    I use microscopes to examine the end grain and count the cell width of the rays, check for fluorescence with UV light, and occasionally use chemical tests. You can also send a sample to the US government for ID and they will do all the hard work for free.

    Whether a particular sample quickly develops cracks depends on so many factors I never even consider it. The relative stability of end grain turnings is difficult to judge since it doesn't warp the same way as face grain turnings.

    JKJ

  12. #12
    "I used my air hoes to blow out the end grain"

    There's a joke in here, somewhere...

  13. #13
    Join Date
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    E TN, near Knoxville
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ricc Havens View Post
    John, I don't have a high powered loop or magnifier. I did find a chunk in the trash from the cut off and tried to cut a slice with a razor blade. Couldn't get a good slice as the wood was hard and the blade would just cut small chunks not a nice thin slice.
    You don't need a high power loop or magnifier. 10x is more than enough.

    Shaving the wood with a new single edged razor blade can be difficult but is MUCH easier if you first soak the sample in water for a while which will soften it. I often soak the pieces. I have to use a new razor blade on each sample so I buy them in packages of 100 - very cheap. You can also use a medical scalpel or a razor sharp bench chisel or carving chisel.

    I usually cut end grain samples to inspect on the bandsaw, making them about 1/2" thick and maybe 1/2" x 3/4". I usually only slice clean a tiny spot, enough to expose a ring or so. I don't get fanatical about it. Slicing is helpful since sawing and sanding tend to obscure the pores. For some ring porous woods, the very tiny pores in the late wood are distinctive identifiers, for example elm and oak are very easy to ID this way.

    Besides the pores themselves, the presence of tyloses plugging the pores will help narrow down a sample even more.

    If interested in Wood ID, one of the best resources is the book Identifying Wood by R. Bruce Hoadley, available on Amazon. I've used mine so much all the pages are falling out.

    JKJ

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ricc Havens View Post
    I don't thinks it's hickory as it wasn't wicked hard and it's not as light colored as the other few pieces of hickory that I have. Might be apple. a local orchard last year was clearing a section of their land to replant a different crop. A friend grabbed a few chunks and brought me a couple pieces. this may have been one of those he gave me that I forgot to label. But, on the other hand, I know apple is unstable and prone to cracking and this piece did have a few small cracks I had to turn past and work around but not the extreme cracking a couple of the other pieces did.

    Any other input??

    Thanks
    Ricc

    Hickory can be quite dark and variable from really light to almost walnut-like, which is why I suggested it's hickory. But hickory is very hard wood. So perhaps it is apple. You can usually smell apple.

  15. #15
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    Aug 2007
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    Lakewood, CO
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    761
    Looks like Crabapple to me.

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