Do wooden arms warp


I hate to sound stupid or pedantic, but I have historically done a lot of woodwork - turning/routering/bedmaking. The single biggest problem is locating wood that does not warp.
Wood cut and left to settle over 50 years continue to warp, likewise, even very old wood warps as well. In my experience when a piece is smaller/thinner it is more pronounced unless there is some lamination (not always a cure). I am yet to come across or find a treatment which stops warping. It would be nice if a manufacturer of such an arm chimes in on this thread, because arms such as: Durand, Shroder, Reed etc all have wood arms/options and they really are the most expensive arms out there.
lohanimal

Showing 6 responses by geoffkait

A guy I knew from school was an Air Force Lieutenant who volunteered for an experiment at the medical research facility at Wright Patt AFB in Ohio, the experiment was to see how long he could stay in a heated chamber before signaling the experimenter to be let out. Dressed in street clothes he was in the Chamber at 425 F for 45 minutes. No big deal.
Swampman, by the way, I am in the sauna at the club frequently for periods of ten minutes or more. The thermometer in the sauna reads more than 210 degrees F most days. No prob-prob-problems here.
Lewis, I didn't say 445 degrees, I said 425 degrees. I'll take every degree I can get. Lol You guys ain't thinking about this the right way. Humidity is the thing that kills you. You can stand very high temperatures if the humidity is near zero. As I said I've been in the sauna at the gym when the air temp is over 212 degrees, I.e., boiling. Hel-loo!
Listen up, this just in...

"Who knows. But I read in Guinness Book of World Records that the US Air Force did experiments back in the 60's where they subjected naked men (briefly) to 400 degrees F, and heavily-clothed men to 500 degrees F with no ill effects."

Cheers, GK
Isochronism, if you walk into the sauna at 220 degrees directly from the Steam Room next door at say 140 degrees it actually feels like room temperature in the sauna, at least for the first few seconds. Hint: it's the humidity. I be been in the sauna at 220 for up to twenty minutes, no ppppproblem.