dealing with Knots - woodworking

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Mark Grant

Acting Captain of The St Annes Jombulance.
Location
Hanworth, Middx.
I was in Austria the other week and I saw several wood gutters, all softwood.
I'd go with the bitumen, a nice thinned coat first followed by a full coat.
 

Accy cyclist

Legendary Member
I'm listening to the Notts County v Accy Stanley match on the radio and Stanley have just equalised in injury time!:dance:
 

Zimbob

Veteran
Location
Inverness
I was in Austria the other week and I saw several wood gutters, all softwood.
I'd go with the bitumen, a nice thinned coat first followed by a full coat.

Aye, Redwood used to be used a good bit for guttering in the U.K too, at least down Manchester way, always seemed to be a bit counter-intuitive to me, but it worked...

Often painted I believe, and painted Redwood, if maintained, can last for many, many years :smile:

Looking at the picture, i think this is most likely Whitewood, as opposed to Redwood, but the principle of treating/sealing it will be the same :smile:
 

slowmotion

Quite dreadful
Location
lost somewhere
@woodenspoons is right with the plug idea. Even if you paint it with bitumen, it won't stop the knot going AWOL over time. Bitumen isn't an adhesive. I would drill out the knot with a holesaw, make a timber plug with the same hole saw, and fix the plug in place using a low modulus silicone mastic. As others have said, that timber is going to move all over the place.
 

MikeG

Guru
Location
Suffolk
[QUOTE 4932006, member: 9609"]out of curiosity what would be the best choice of wood to use here and how would you finish it ?

I'm not going to change from what I am using, its made now and when painted it will be in use, I reckon I will get longer than two years before needing replaced. I'm just curious what would be the best choice, I'm thinking Oak ?[/QUOTE]

In terms of durability, jarrah or teak would be your best bet (good luck working them, though. They're hard as nails, particularly jarrah). However, I am pretty sure they are both on the CITES list, as endangered, so probably not the best material for a gutter.

Here is a useful image, albeit the segments aren't sequential. Of the commonly available European hardwoods, oak and sweet chestnut would be my favourite for the job, but larch would survive longer.
 

Randomnerd

Bimbleur
Location
North Yorkshire
Larch - but made thick enough so they don't warp, and with no sapwood. I made a few years ago using a gutter adze - - tooled finish resists rot better than sawn -
 

sight-pin

Veteran
Another option, You could always glass fibre a run of light matting inside.
 

Mark Grant

Acting Captain of The St Annes Jombulance.
Location
Hanworth, Middx.
[QUOTE 4932009, member: 9609"]I have been told you shouldn't thin bitumen, but like you I would thingk a bit of thinners (10%) would help in soak in for the first coat.[/QUOTE]

Years ago bitumen was often mixed with creosote to coat wood cladding on barns and suchlike, the last time I did this was in the late '80s / early '90s on a garage in Walton on Thames.
 
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