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Milling Elm for a table top


Crazy_Bull
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Hey Up,

 

Go gentle on me! Besides dropping and chopping I know very little!!

 

Our farm has  some chunky Elm suckers, 3-4’ at the butt, then 30-33” on the straight, mostly 20’ long before they branch . A few have succumbing to the beetle, and are leaning on the edge of the wood so have dropped them before they died. 
 

ultimate plan is to make a couple of large ‘farmhouse’ kitchen table tops, circa 10-12’ long.

 

My question is; how thick a slab should I start with? I know there is a fair element of wastage when planing down a slab. They were dropped this autumn, plan to slab ASAP and can store to season as long as needed. 
 

any pointers would be greatly received.

 

thanks in advance, 

 

 

C B

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edited by Crazy_Bull
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I've had elm from Huntingdon before. Funnily enough, it's got it's own subspecies (Huntingdon Elm). Lovely stuff - fairly wide pale sap band and very dark heartwood. 

 

If you have a bunch of them, it would be worth taking them to Helmdon Sawmills in Northamptonshire, as they'll mill them in very little time, charge you very little to do so, you'll lose less to saw kerf than chainsaw milling it, and selling a couple of logs (once sawn) will easily pay for all the haulage and milling costs. That is where I took the elm from Huntingdon, which was probably 5-6 years ago.

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