My Top 10 Reasons Why Steam Bending Wood Fails | Engels Coach Shop

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Welcome back once again. This is Engels coach and I'm Dave. Over the past few years a number of you have requested that I would offer a line of merchandise that is so common to YouTube channels as an avenue for you to help support this channel. Well, I have been reluctant to do that because I'm really not into merchandising, that type of deal, but when we crossed the hundred thousand subscriber mark, I thought, well maybe it's a viable option. So you may have noticed in last week's video, where I introduce Rick Bischoff in the Luminary Shoppe, I included the link in the description of two avenues that you can do that. So I just want to make it more of a public awareness deal that we have done this. And I will be including in the description the links to access t-shirts, hoodies, mugs, and we have caps that are being made, as a line of merchandise that allows you to help support the channel. Well when I initially started this channel my goal and purpose was mainly to demonstrate what I do. I wasn't really intending to teach what I do, but I have put up a number of videos on steam bending wood and to my surprise they have been fairly well received, with some of them going up over the million view mark. Well in the number of videos I put up I have added little bits and pieces of information here there, but they are kind of scattered throughout the different videos, so I've decided to do one video and concentrate the top ten reasons why I think bending wood for most people does not work. And if you can understand these ten principles I think you'll get wood to bend just as well as I do. So this video is going through the steps of bending some sheep wagon bows and I'm going to point out the ten reasons usually you have a failure when you're trying to bend wood. Well these top ten reasons are not necessarily in order of importance, but just as they come through the process. But the first thing I would mention is you cannot bend coniferous trees. They need to be deciduous trees and a deciduous tree is a tree that has leaves that shed every fall. A coniferous is an evergreen, needle style tree and that type of wood will not bend. You can get it to warp and slightly curve, but technically coniferous trees will not bend. Now because I live in the state of Montana, and we are not really a hardwood state, I have to import most of my hardwoods. Therefore, most of my hardwood is kiln dried. Ideally, fresh, green sawn, or air dried lumber bends the best, but it is not absolutely necessary. If you follow these ten principles you can even get kiln dried to bend. I'm going through here, the process of trimming down these bows to thickness. I'm going to plane them to five eighths of an inch thick, then I'll take them down to a two inch width. I also have a set mixed in here that's going to be 5/8 thick by two and a half inch wide. These are the actual bows that I'm going to demonstrate in the bend here. So once I've run these through the first time, to make them more uniform, they aren't so uniform through the saw, then I can start loading the planer up and increase the efficiency of the planing. Since these bows are going to receive a canvas top I'm going to round over the corners before I bend these so that they will not rub through the canvas. It's much easier to route these flat and straight than it is after they're bent. Now the second reason why would generally fails when you're trying to bend is because it has not been selected for the straight enough grain. Steam bendable quality lumber is considered to have less than one inch of a run-out for every 12 inches linear, so these here with the curved, in them are actually a not ideal. I'm not going to bend these for sheep wagon bows, but I'm going to bend these for 38 inch covered wagon bows, for this section of the bowl will remain straight and not be bent. Now the third reason why oftentimes steam bending fails is because you don't have enough water in your boiler system to begin with. You have to allow for absorption into the material and you have to allow for loss. You also want to use fresh water. Water that is steamed or boiled over and over again loses its wetness, so fresh water is ideal and I run about a twenty five gallon capacity. About 35 years ago, when I started experimenting and learning how to bend wood, I went through the procedures of using natural gas, I used electric, I used camp stoves, but I have come down to use, in my area, coal as a foundation for my heat. So when I receive an inquiry questioning why they're steamed bending doesn't work, one of the first issues that I ask is, what is your heat source> Water may boil at 212 but you need to take it up to about 260 degrees in order to get it to work effectively qhen you're steaming, so for me coal works well. Ehe fifth issue is not making your water wet enough. The purpose of using a surfactant is to break the water surface tension and allow penetration to increase. There are a number of different styles, but over the years the most common use surfactant and steam bending is ammonia. And as woodworkers, we tend to build our steam tanks out of wood which is counterintuitive, because you're trying to steam the wood and at the same time you're steaming your box, so you need a steam box that is not made from wood. Also very high on the list of reasons why steam bending fails is because you cannot generate pressure. If you don't have enough water volume, and you don't have enough heat source, you cannot generate pressure, and you need about two hundred and sixty degrees in order to obtain this three to four pounds pressure. These next two issues involved the metal banding that needs to be on the outside of the wood, because wood will not stretch, you have to compress wood in order to get it to bend, so you need a metal band on the outside. It doesn't have to be fancy, doesn't have to be high tensile strength, I use eighth inch thick, mild steel banding and it works just fine. Now green or fresh sawn lumber only requires one hour for every inch thick when it's in the steamer under pressure. Kiln dried doubles that. These bows are five eighths of an inch thick. I'm going to leave them in for an hour and a half under pressure to get these to bend. Now combined with using a metal strap, your lumber has to be contained. If it is a sharp, thick band, it has to be a hundred percent contained. These bows are only five eighths of an inch thick. I can restrain the stretch by simply clamping the ends. If I chose bending three quarters, or 1 inch thick, or thicker, I would put an angle iron end on my band and absolutely not allow the wood to stretch. Now because all wood bending is compression, it takes a lot of strength, and a lot of power, to make those fibers compress, so you can obtain your power by increasing your horsepower, or you can increase your leverage. It takes one or the other. So hopefully this is a little more concise in one video of the ten biggest reasons why I think most bending fails. Now I have gone through lots of failures and I have found that these are the top 10 reasons why bending wood fails. Once again, thanks for watching
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Channel: EngelsCoachShop
Views: 170,968
Rating: 4.9534039 out of 5
Keywords: wheelwright, blacksmithing, horse wagons, steam bending, wood working, engels coach, steam bending failure, carriage repairs, wagon building, sheep wagon bows, wagon bows, how to bend wood, engles coach, dave engle, dave engel, joliet mt, wagon builder, buggy builder, wood bending, 10 reasons why, the luminary shoppe
Id: 1pPKUgpn0CI
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 20min 40sec (1240 seconds)
Published: Fri May 22 2020
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