- Joined
- Feb 26, 2018
- Messages
- 474
- Reaction score
- 707
This is my second horn, my first I used bass wood, is there a "better, best" wood for the plug?
Any hardwood polishes up nice in the end.
Someone knows how to torment me.Double entendre there?
I've been using walnut on the last few that I've made. I have a 1" tap and die for wood, so I make a threaded stopper with some crap apple wood from an old tree of mine. Both turn nicely. BTW, I also have a 1/2" tap and die that I use on priming horns.This is my second horn, my first I used bass wood, is there a "better, best" wood for the plug?
Bass wood is pretty dang soft. I wouldn't consider it great for anything,
Truly surpised. I came upon a post saying that pine is sometimes used. I didn't think pine was used cause it's a "soft"wood. It ought to make the carving easier, I don't have a bandsaw.
We did a remodel job on a house built around 1900. We wanted to save the white pine trim. That stuff was hard as a rock after all the years.
Jake,
The only reason I knew period "Heart" or "Hard" pine was as hard as it was during the period, was I studied the kind of wood that 18th century Tool Boxes were normally made from.
There is quite an industry using reclaimed floor boards and barn wood of the 18th and 19th century for modern flooring and other purposes. That's where I tried to get boards big enough for a reproduction 18th century Tool Box.
Gus
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