Dry heat for dry wood, steam for wet wood. Got it!
I may be getting a mess of pretty green hickory cut in October and November and need it for a bowmaking class soon. For those that have had experience steaming green hickory, what do you think of stuffing these staves into a box, plumbing in a line to a big old kettle of water and pouring the steam to them?
Next, we have a small sawmill up the road from town and they steam kiln dry these huge multiple railroad car sized bunks of 1" ponderosa pine boards in their steam kilns. What might happen if I can throw these staves on a pile going through treatment?
The place where I am doing the classes is a "maker space" woodshop and we are doing this in 1 1/2 hour classes once a week for two months. Because this is stretching out the process, the wood will also have more time to cure even as it gets smaller and closer to final dimensions week by week.
Checking/cracking seems to happen when rapid drying takes place in wood with higher moisture content, in other words when there is a lot of moisture movement happening rapidly. Also, the larger the piece of wood, the more shrinking builds up tensions causing the checking and cracking. If the steam kiln can push the moisture content down to 15-18% before we start hogging off wood, I believe we could put the now much smaller sticks into a closet with a dehumidifier and push the process a bit faster.
Weigh in, folks.....pros and cons, no wild hair ideas unwelcome!