I just inherited about 100 board feet of 4/4 rough saw walnut. These boards have been stored for a few years. I want to use some of these boards now so I am going to take them over to a friend’s woodshop and plane them to ¾. My question is: I am concerned about warping after planing. Should I plane them now, after I bring them into his shop, or should I wait a while? By the way, for the use of my friends planer I am going to buy him new planner blades.
-- Ron in Osseo, Minnesota























9 comments so far
Scott Bryan
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7813 posts in 213 days
posted 92 days ago
Hi Ron,
I generally plane as I am going to use the wood. But in your case, since you are borrowing the planer, you might want to go ahead and plane them to thickness unless you have ready access to the planer. If you do then it would be a good excuse for a visit as well.
-- With God's help all things are possible- even woodworking. Woodworking is not just a hobby, it is an (expletive deleted) expensive hobby.
Lakey
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100 posts in 163 days
posted 92 days ago
This is pretty complicated, Ron. Usually when you get a stock of new lumber you want to leave it in your shop as long as possible to acclimate to your shop’s climate before doing anything to it. Then, when you start the project, you plane it to about 1/16th over you final thickness and let it sit another few days. If you take it to your friend’s shop and plane it to final thickness, it will warp when you bring it back to your shop. I’m not sure what I would do in your position – maybe let it sit in your shop for a couple of weeks, then take it and plane it, and high-tail it back to your shop?
—Lakey
-- "No Board Left Behind"
northwoodsman
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28 posts in 137 days
posted 92 days ago
It sounds like the perfect excuse to purchase a planer!
-- NorthWoodsMan
HallTree
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562 posts in 158 days
posted 92 days ago
Yes, a planer would be nice, but I share the shop with about 10 or 12 other old guys. and not all of them think we need a planer.
-- Ron in Osseo, Minnesota
Paul D
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1525 posts in 139 days
posted 92 days ago
Have you already jointed one face of the boards or are you planning on using a planer sled to accomplish that? Personally I would be relunctant to plane all of it to 3/4” unless I knew what I was going to make with it in advance.
-- Paul D, Atlanta GA
HallTree
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562 posts in 158 days
posted 92 days ago
For now I plan to make a small cradle for my great grandchild, so I don’t need to plane all of it.
-- Ron in Osseo, Minnesota
tenontim
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620 posts in 135 days
posted 92 days ago
Get what you need now planed and gripe and complain about all the inconvenience it is to get something planed, until your shop mates give in a agree on a planer.
-- Tim -- http://tmuli.com
GaryK
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8183 posts in 379 days
posted 92 days ago
I would say plane what you need for now with some extra boards. Let the extra boards sit around for as long as you can to see what happens to them. If they stay flat get the rest planed.
-- Gary, East TX -- The longest journey begins with a single step.
HallTree
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562 posts in 158 days
posted 92 days ago
Thanks for all the comments. I will just plane what I need for now.
-- Ron in Osseo, Minnesota