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Thread: sealing maple wood cookies

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    NE PA (Pocono's)
    Posts
    1,426

    Default sealing maple wood cookies

    I recently cut some cookies off a tree cut down. The wood shows these tress were last tapped about 40 years ago and very clearly show tap hole staining. I want to use it as a educational tool and put it on the wall of the sugar house. Has anyone had any luck sealing these pieces of wood to preserve and prevent cracking? It is freshly cut wood if that matters.

    Thanks
    Mike
    CDL 2x8
    Around 4000 taps
    Polaris ATVs, Ski Doo snowmobiles to get around
    Atlas Copco pumps
    Lapierre two post RO




    http://s272.photobucket.com/albums/j...Sugar%20shack/

  2. #2
    Haynes Forest Products Guest

    Default

    I have tried myself to keep the pie shape crack from forming without success. Maybe ratchet strap them tight to mitigate and then try this.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvga5aQBFkA

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    NE PA (Pocono's)
    Posts
    1,426

    Default

    yea, definitely not. May try a light sand and a coat of polyurethane.
    CDL 2x8
    Around 4000 taps
    Polaris ATVs, Ski Doo snowmobiles to get around
    Atlas Copco pumps
    Lapierre two post RO




    http://s272.photobucket.com/albums/j...Sugar%20shack/

  4. #4
    Haynes Forest Products Guest

    Default

    I would think the slower it dries the more the wood stretches and shrinks overall, instead of just instantly exploding maybe allow it to shrink in the log form first. I know you don't know where the holes are but a good guess will allow you to keep a few 4' logs slow drying.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2013
    Location
    Thetford, VT
    Posts
    453

    Default

    I believe wood turners (using burls) keep the wood packed in sawdust to keep the wood from drying too quickly.

    I am getting ready to build a large clock to put in my gun shop using a crosscut section from one of our Maples which needed to go to accommodate the new sugarhouse. The tree was dropped in early June with many of the branches left on in case that helps remove some of the sap from the trunk. The roots are exposed as I dug it out and pulled it over vs cutting it and then digging the stump out.

    I plan to put a 28" bar on my chainsaw and start cutting as close to the stump as I can to get a larger clock face and look for staining. I am not sure how high I will have to go....but I plan to take the final slab and wrap it with a steel band that is nearly as thick as the slab. I plan to use one or two bolt point (12 and 6 o'clock) to allow for adjustment to keep the band tight.

    As I just typed that paragraph as thought crawled into my head...check out the band-it system. We started using it last year for our fittings and it worked great. This system is the one used to hold signs on posts on he highway. It is also used for larger pipe fittings (light pump hose). I think you could try this out and continually tighten as needed when the wood changes size. Some extra work, but it may be worth it.

    Mike
    Tapping since 1985 (four generations back to early to mid 1900s). 200-250 taps on buckets and then tubing in the mid 90s. 2013- 275 taps w/sap puller 25 gal. 2014-295 taps w/sap puller 55 ga. (re-tapped to vacuum theory) 2015-330 taps full vac. 65 gal, 2016-400 taps 105 gal, 2017-400 taps 95 gal. 2018-additional 800' mainline and maybe 400 new taps for a total near 800 taps. 2x6 Leader WSE (last year on it) supported by a 250 gph RO.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2016
    Location
    French River Ontario
    Posts
    173

    Default

    I just finished trying an experiment with two 2" cookies
    1st cookie I tried to air dry with a ratchet strap and a 16" log for weight to keep from warping and it started cracking in the center within a week.
    2nd cookie was cut and sprayed instantly with clear lacquer to the point were the lacquer saturated through and started coming out the opposite side. The lacquer bubbles slightly because the pores and air releasing out of the wood but since I sprayed it and let it dry the cookie hasn't cracked. I assume the lacquer acted as a glue and bonded all the fibres together, time will tell. I will sand it down and see if I can put west epoxy system clear epoxy over it and hope the two different clears don't have adverse affects on each other.
    Good luck

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2018
    Location
    Wisconsin
    Posts
    11

    Default

    I did this about 25 years ago with a Douglas for slab. I cut about a 2" slab, then put it on a flat surface, and covered it with plastic so it would dry as slow as possible. I was young and impatient.... After a year, I uncovered it. It was still fully intact and VERY minimal cracking. Wish I would have had a moisture meter back then. Anyway, after I uncovered it, I went to work putting an epoxy finish on it. As soon as I started doing that, several cracks popped up. They grew.... Ruined. Not sure you can do this with conventional methods. I think you need to do some kind of injection method so it bonds all the fibers. I think drying it extremely slow is the first step.

    Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk

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