iDRY Vacuum Kilns

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need some advice

Started by west penn, March 28, 2010, 11:20:33 AM

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west penn



  Hi Folks,  fairly new to this forum but have been drying lumber for a number of years in a small dehumidifier kiln.   Have run across this situation before where part of my load (poplar and oak) is at 8% but there is still some oak that is at 15%.  Normaly I will shut off the compressor and just leave the fans run with the temp. at 120 deg.  Was wondering what the proper steps would be in this case?Am I taking a chance on case hardening the drier part of the load?  Thanks in advance for any help.

logwalker

I assume that is the risk when drying multiple species of wood. I think you will be ok letting it equalize and then going again. But my real world experience is limited.

Joe
Let's all be careful out there tomorrow. Lt40hd, 22' Kenworth Flatbed rollback dump, MM45B Mitsubishi trackhoe, Clark5000lb Forklift, Kubota L2850 tractor

Den Socling

Is the oak quartersawn by any chance?

OneWithWood

Poplar gives up moisture at a much faster rate than oak.  So much faster that it is recommended when drying poplar you load only half the capacity of the kiln.
I would unload the poplar and dry the wet oak by itself.
One With Wood
LT40HDG25, Woodmizer DH4000 Kiln

Den Socling

west penn said "some" of the oak was 15% while some was dry. If you flatsaw through the pith and end up with some quartersawn and mix it all together, this is just what you get. It takes the quartersawn a lot longer to dry because the rays are not at an exposed face.

scsmith42

Quote from: Den Socling on March 30, 2010, 02:44:57 PM
west penn said "some" of the oak was 15% while some was dry. If you flatsaw through the pith and end up with some quartersawn and mix it all together, this is just what you get. It takes the quartersawn a lot longer to dry because the rays are not at an exposed face.

+1.
Peterson 10" WPF with 65' of track
Smith - Gallagher dedicated slabber
Tom's 3638D Baker band mill
and a mix of log handling heavy equipment.

west penn

   
  All of the load is flatsawn and has been air dried.  However, I didn't have enough of the same batch of oak to fill the order so I put some in that wasn't air dried as long.  Poplar was 24% and oak was 22 and 28%.   I've been running fans only at 118*  and it is now at 9 and 13. I just wondering what the poplar will be like when I get it out.  Luckily its on the bottom of the load.

Den Socling

With 118', if the humidity is 40% or more, the poplar won't go below 7%.

west penn


  Thanks for all the input.  I use only probes in my kiln - no wet bulb or humidistat. Mostly just monitor the water output and temp. a full load would be 1000 bd. ft.  I am getting close to putting an L200 to use and am wondering if I'll get by using the same procedures I use on the smaller kiln. Any reccomendations?   Was considering a humidistat but the factory rep said I really shouldn't need one.  Any thoughts?

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