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Old 05-24-2020, 07:15 PM   #9
Sr. Mints
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Quote:
Originally Posted by surferguy View Post
that is a board with a heap of stress on it. Wow.

My theory is the flat grain walnut border caused this issue, it is going to expand and contract differently than the end grain center area. They wanted to move in different directions but were locked in with the glue. The result is a catastrophic failure when the tension was too great.

You could try and dump a bunch of glue down the crack and use a shop vac to suck it down into the fissure, then use a bunch of clamps and see if you can pull it back together.

This particular design may have benefited from a full immersion soak every month or two vs just a top coat.

I haven’t seen a failure like this before and there are surely other people that will know more about this than me but that is my assessment.

All that said - it’s a nice board!
Aye, it is nice. I don't often see that cousin these days, but this was one of his first of a handful of boards - just a hobby project when he had some time off.

Speaking of immersion. That was suggested by someone I know and would be doable with a smaller board that would fit in, say, a sink. However, this one would need a bathtub and 20 litres of mineral oil. I thought about a heavy duty bag tied pretty tight around the board, and then try soaking it that way. It works for brining a turkey...

Will try the glue/vacuum/clamps, then sand and maybe bag-soak
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