Finally had time to reduce a relatively small winged elm stave down to near bow dimensions today. I cut the tree mid Feb, and it has been in my garage since. It was very straight when I split it, but it has dried some with a little bow to it side-to-side. It is a very clean piece of wood with no knots and I am excited to maybe get a bow out of it that I could hunt with this fall.
My daddy-in-law and I made a form (again, per Dean's recommendations) and I had a fellow weld me up an aluminim tube to steam staves in (similar to Torges rig in his book). I am probably going to steam it this weekend.
I have never steamed anything but vegetables (LOL) and I am wondering what differences Elm might need versus Osage (I have only the Torges method to draw on). Torges claims for osage 1.5 hours steaming would get the wood where you could fix the issues easily and clamp to a form to get the stave dancing to the right tune, so to speak.
Any of you out there have experience steaming 4 month garage dried elm? Any pointers would be greatly appreciated! I don't have a moisture meter, but the reduced stave felt light to me ... like it had really dried out a bunch in my garage. You all think another month or so of drying after the re-acclimation from steaming would be sufficient for floor tillering? I do have a hot box I can put it in as well.
Thanks in advance,
Sandy
[attachment deleted by admin]