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Honeylocust Wood

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Can honey locust wood be used to make furniture?

Tim Inman: Yes, it is beautiful. It’s not the most dimensionally stable wood in the world, but it is useable and very pretty.

T. C. Knight: Absolutely. The sapwood of honeylocust (Gledtisia triacanthos) is yellowish and wide, while the heartwood is light red to reddish-brown. It has no characteristic odor or taste. It is very heavy and very hard, tough, strong, with a high luster. The texture is moderately coarse, with straight to irregular grain. It is a ring porous tree, which means it will have open grain somewhat akin to white oak, so it may require filling of pores before finishing. It is a beautiful wood with pronounced grain so it would make fine furniture. By the way, the correct spelling is one word: honeylocust. I recommend every woodworker who wants to know all the technical aspects of wood to own a copy of the USDA Forest Service publication the Wood Handbook.  It is available for download from the USDA Forest Products Lab, but is a huge file, so it would probably be best to download the individual chapters as separate files.
This article originally appeared in the Woodworker's Journal eZine.
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Copyright; 2010 Woodworker's Journal
All rights reserved. No part of this article may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval devices or systems, without prior written permission from the publisher.

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