frenchyd said:
In reply to Curtis73 :
Please rethink your idea.
First the work involved is massive. Eyeballing what you have there is about 4-500 board feet of wood once you get rid of the firewood. I kid you not having done it. Just moving a trees worth of wood is a monumental job. Hours of hard physical labor and that's if you have the required forklifts. Etc. You have to mill it right away. It's got to be stacked and stickered while it's freezing. Once it thaws it has to be under tarps with heavy weights on top, in part to hold the tarps on but also to keep the wood straight. Drying wood loves to warp, bend, curve, and twist. you need good natural ventilation. If on the ground you need something to keep it off the dirt or you will quickly ruin all your work. Gravel works. As does asphalt. But it's got to be flat! Anything less than flat that's the shape the boards will eventually assume.
In order to dry properly so it doesn't spalt ( that's streaks of mold going through the wood that look very colorful but is one step away from rotten) Stickering is thin even sticks set every 8-10 inches apart to let air go through the wood pile. We are talking hundreds of sticks made from already dried wood. No you cannot use green wood it will transfer mold.
Most sawmills won't cut yard trees because of embedded metal will damage or destroy their blades. If they do you are responsible for anything the blades hit. If your mill has a circular blade and the teeth are replaceable if you are in luck you might get by for $50 or less when it hits that metal that's assuming he only loses a few teeth and the rest can be resharpened. ( or more if he loses a lot of teeth.You don't want to know what replacing a 50-60 inch blade will cost if the blade is ruined because of embedded porcelean or something. ). A bandsaw mill can actually have the whole blade ruined. Those get very costly too but cheaper than those big circular blades.
Wood has grades. FAS stands for furniture and select. that's high quality wood with very limited knots or other defects. In Maple you want the white early wood on the outside. The darker heart wood isn't considered choice.
Mill run is wood just as it comes off the tree plainsawn not quarter sawn. It's the least expensive wood but you can assume over 15% waste and that's if your sawyer knows his stuff.
AW there is too much to cover here. It takes at least a year to dry wood outside. Don't attempt to do maple outside. Cut the boards 4/4 or 4 quarters. They will finish up 3/4" when dried and surfaced. Flooring is 3/4 inch thick. Furniture is made with 3/4. Etc.
when all finished you will likely have too much wood and yet not enough. Sounds crazy but I started out with over 55,000 bd ft of wood. I ruined over 1000 bd feet and sold 1200 bd ft for 10 cents a bd ft plus gave away at least a few thousand. I still have about 10,000 bd ft left with a lot of it having planned use.
but I've scrapped probably 5,000 bd ft because it was too long or insect damaged. Cut offs and bad warped twisted or curved.
This is all great info. Thank you.
I have a 36x48 barn with a gravel floor where I dry wood. Right now it has about 2000 bf of white and red oak, about 1000 bf of pretty rare wormy chestnut from the 40s, and other assorted lumber. Stickers I got... probably about 10,000 of them. Thousands of 3/4" plywood strips left over from projects at the theater.
I'm hoping the sawyer knows his stuff. He's retired after 30 years in the biz.
This whole process is mostly because my cousin and I are both carpenters, and five families have already taken all the firewood they can handle. I could process, season, and sell the rest, but I don't want to fill my 0.18 acre property with huge stacks of wood until fall, nor do I really have the time and lumbar fortitude to do all that processing. So... friend of a friend is going to mill it. This is how I start. Your input is fantastic. I'm sure now that I've started down the rabbit hole, we'll be talking a lot in the future.
... and flooring can be any thicknesses. I did a floor with strips of Luan once. Takes stain nicely. Many of the commercial options for things like oak hardwood or bamboo are 3/8"