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Chakte Kok?? http://www-.luthiersforum.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=10102&t=8744 |
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Author: | russ [ Sun Oct 08, 2006 6:25 am ] |
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Just wondering if anyone (or one of our fine suppliers) has any of this wood available. From what I can find on the net, this wood goes by lots of different names...sickingia salvadorensis seems to be the taxonomic(?) name. I was poking around on Michael Dunn's site the other day, when I ran across this: ![]() I think this is some seriously cool zoot! Living in Amsterdam, this is not the kind of wood I would find in our local lumberyard, so if anyone out there has any tips for me on finding some (especially some stripey stuff as in the pic), I would appreciate it! Thanks |
Author: | old man [ Sun Oct 08, 2006 8:20 am ] |
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Russ, any idea where this is native to? I've never heard of it, but it sure is pretty. Ron |
Author: | Bobc [ Sun Oct 08, 2006 9:07 am ] |
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Ron It's more commonly known as redheart. I usually see it in smaller dimensions like turning squares and bowl blanks. |
Author: | russ [ Sun Oct 08, 2006 9:38 am ] |
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Ron, I believe it's native to Mexico and Central America. I have found one supplier that has a couple of boards, but they are uniformly colored, and I'd like to find some that's more like the pic shows. Also, shipping whole boards internationally is expensive, so I'd prefer a supplier that could cut to guitar sets. |
Author: | Dennis Leahy [ Sun Oct 08, 2006 9:59 am ] |
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Hi Russ, Bob is (of course) right, as it is commonly called Redheart here in the US. The stuff I have and that I have seen is from the Yucatan Peninsula. I can tell you that the red color is relatively "phantom", and the wood will eventually look more orange than red. It is also a bit brittle. (I have several pieces of furniture I have built from it.) I also have a guitar set from lumber that I bought 15 years ago, and will eventually build with it even though I know it won't retain the stunning red color of the freshly sawn wood. It is occasionally curly, sometimes with small fiddleback curls (like the set I have), and more frequently with widely spaced curls, more like the curly figure often seen in North American Black Cherry. Dennis {edit}FWIW, I looked at my Chakte Kok wood, and it not fiddleback. I got it mixed up with a fiddleback Nargusta set. ![]() |
Author: | Bob Garrish [ Sun Oct 08, 2006 10:41 am ] |
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I think that one of my suppliers might have some, I'll check on Tuesday when things are open again (it's a long weekend in Canada). |
Author: | Mike Loukakis [ Sun Oct 08, 2006 11:17 am ] |
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Hi Russ, Since you are in the Netherlands, check with www.espen.de . I think mr. Juergen Jordan might help you. They have it listed in their catalog but you should ask them if they have it in stock. |
Author: | Steve Kinnaird [ Sun Oct 08, 2006 1:41 pm ] |
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Russ, I bought a set from Hibdon Hardwoods, a supplier here on the OLF. They billed it as Redheart. The stuff is really sensitive to sunlight and that pretty red color will fade quickly upon exposure. I have no experience working with the stuff, but it IS pretty. Steve |
Author: | russ [ Sun Oct 08, 2006 4:11 pm ] |
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Thanks for the tips guys! I will check the the supplier in Germany and with Hibdon. |
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