Question
I have some awesome black walnut crotch slabs ranging from 2 to 3.5 inches thick. They are currently on sticks and are very green. I've endcoated them very well with Anchorseal. I want to be sure they dry with minimal (no) degrade and am looking for suggestions on successfully drying such stock. I have a Northland Kiln that runs 24/7, but am wary to put them in until at least all the free water is gone.
I searched the forum and someone wrote: "...after sealing the ends with wax end sealer, apply pentacryl generously over the entire crotch...". I would like to hear more about this.
Can anyone help? I have a lot of this material and need to be sure it's handled correctly.
Forum Responses
From contributor S:
I'd slap some wax on the face of those crotches immediately.
Even then, they may check a little, but not to worry - a little color matched epoxy will bring it back together when you get around to working with them.
I have tried to get more technical information about pentacryl, but I have not seen any independent studies concerning the use of such a material. Everything I have seen with technical info comes from the manufacturer.
Would giving the faces a thin coat of watered down Anchorseal be appropriate? Also, it is stickered and covered in a typical fashion. It is shaded all day, but gets later afternoon sun for a few hours. Should I consider Shade-dri curtains or such?
When I find a nice crotch - the spinal looking figure that's prone to checking - I rub the face with a thin coat of carnauba wax. It slows the end grain drying just enough to avoid checking, but not so much as to make a problem in terms of uneven drying.
I always carefully shade dry crotches before, if any, kiln drying.
Shade-Dri is probably a good idea, so long as some drying still occurs. Maybe 100% coverage with Shade-Dri is too much, especially if you wax the faces.
I have not done any oven sampling yet, but I suspect it to be in the 60-80% range.
So, concerning your pieces of wood, the only way I know of to dry them without surface checks is to put them in the kiln right away with a s-l-o-w schedule (Gene could certainly fill us in on the schedule for 8-12 quarter walnut). What I do all the time is let them air dry (yes, with small surface checks in the figured area, which I don't consider a defect in the crotch area anyway) until my kiln is ready for an 8/4 wood load, and then I put them in with it.