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Red oak for pegs? #1563 04/11/05 07:35 PM
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Chance Offline OP
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Is there any reason I should not use red oak pegs. I have a local source for red oak, which is being air dried and is probably still a bit on the green side.

Re: Red oak for pegs? #1564 04/12/05 01:02 AM
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daiku Offline
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Red oak is a fine choice. Plenty strong. We use it for most of our frames.


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Re: Red oak for pegs? #1565 04/12/05 06:15 PM
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Red oak it is then. Thanks for the response. Better get my shaving horse built!

Re: Red oak for pegs? #1566 04/12/05 11:52 PM
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nvh-srjones Offline
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If you're thinking of a 'powered' shaving horse, you might consider the "Logman Tenon Maker" available at Baileys an some other places. Making dowels is a bonus use of the tool.

Re: Red oak for pegs? #1567 04/13/05 12:19 PM
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Roger Nair Offline
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When selecting stock avoid oak with close growth rings, rapidly grown oak will have greater density.

Re: Red oak for pegs? #1568 04/13/05 07:26 PM
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That seems to run counter to my experience with wood in general. Slow growth often produces a heavier more dense wood. OTOH mabye it's just me thats dense. I'll have to check the "Wood handbook".

Re: Red oak for pegs? #1569 04/13/05 11:27 PM
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Roger Nair Offline
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Oak is different from softwoods in regards to dense grain (ie close grain) versus density (dry weight/volume) or specific gravity. The annual growth of oak produces a solid dense early wood ring and a porous,less dense late wood ring. So wide early wood bands, in oak, produce a higher specific gravity hard strong wood. The early wood rings in softwood are less dense than late wood rings so the stronger softwood has a higher ring per inch count.

So dense grain does not always imply better denser wood. Language sets up the misunderstnding


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