Wood Found in Player Pianos - Sweetgum & Mahogany
By Brian Thornton
In regards to my post on American Chestnut, I was misinformed by the
fellows who gave me the lumber. Shortly after I posted it I received
a couple of emails questioning if it was the right species.
Yesterday I took a sample of the wood to a guitar maker I know who
lives about 60 miles from here. He has his own portable saw mill so
he has more of a variety of woods to work with. He showed me some
American chestnut and this was not what I had. He had a piece of
sweetgum (not red gum) which matched what I had perfectly: same odor,
color and working properties.
Sweetgum is very common around here. I have at least a dozen trees
in my forest. Since none of the local lumber mills run any of it and
my guitar maker friend is selling off his saw, I don't know if I will
ever have any again after I use up what I have.
Honduras mahogany is a very stable wood that mills well. I have
seen four player action stacks in which solid mahogany was used.
These were all very early, pre-1912. Two of them came out of push-up
players. In all of them the screws were rusted in their holes. At
first I attributed the rust to humidity, but the last action (a very
early Starr) was kept in a dry place all its life and it still had the
same symptoms. I can only assume that there are acids in the wood that
react with screws. I have also found the same problem with walnut.
Brian Thornton - Short Mountain Music Works
Woodbury, Tennessee
http://www.shortmountainmusic.com/
[ At http://www.na.fs.fed.us/spfo/pubs/silvics_manual/Volume_2/liquidambar/styraciflua.htm
[ "Sweetgum is one of the most important commercial hardwoods in the
[ Southeast." -- Robbie
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(Message sent Sat 14 Mar 2009, 15:32:54 GMT, from time zone GMT-0500.) |
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