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Posted (edited)

Good evening 

Just wondering what lime timber is like for milling? 

If it's any good what size is best and what's a rough price for road side lengths? 

Thank you in advance

 

Edited by Alex21
  • Like 1

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Posted
5 minutes ago, Alex21 said:

 

Just wondering what lime timber is like for milling? 

 

 

 

Boring and largely worthless. 

 

Creamy white, minimal figure and tough to sell. It will shift eventually, but it take ages and you'll not make much on it. 

 

Best to pass and save your efforts for something more marketable.

  • Like 4
Posted
1 minute ago, Big J said:

Boring and largely worthless. 

 

Creamy white, minimal figure and tough to sell. It will shift eventually, but it take ages and you'll not make much on it. 

 

Best to pass and save your efforts for something more marketable.

Which are the most marketable J?

 

Been deliberating over a mill purchase for some time but not sure that the species mix in the Wood would warrant one.

Posted
11 minutes ago, Big J said:

Boring and largely worthless. 

 

Creamy white, minimal figure and tough to sell. It will shift eventually, but it take ages and you'll not make much on it. 

 

Best to pass and save your efforts for something more marketable.

dont even make good firewood,,,,, timbers i try to keep clear of are Lime, willow, popular and Horse chestnut all very time consuming and boring,

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)

1888790_892554747436861_6495851019937028

 

Carves nicely. Have a google of Grinling Gibbons. The French use it for furniture rather more than we do. 

Edited by CDMR
  • Like 1
Posted
9 hours ago, Alex21 said:

Good evening 

Just wondering what lime timber is like for milling? 

If it's any good what size is best and what's a rough price for road side lengths? 

Thank you in advance

 

I operate one of the few sawmills that actively buys Lime for milling.  We are only small but need at least a couple of lorry loads per year.

 

I pay around £70 per cubic metre.  Needs to be fairly local to me of course (south east wales) with good access.

Posted

Found it an interesting one , easy to mill and very light when dry... gonna make sliding doors out of these ...it didn’t like sitting out though after milling and I quite regret leaving it for a few months before bringing it in but test sanded a bit and it came up alright. IMG_8586.jpgIMG_8584.jpg

Posted
12 hours ago, Squaredy said:

I operate one of the few sawmills that actively buys Lime for milling.  We are only small but need at least a couple of lorry loads per year.

 

I pay around £70 per cubic metre.  Needs to be fairly local to me of course (south east wales) with good access.

Whats it used for? 

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