Tool Talk

Classic Auto and Motorcycle Tools => Classic Auto and Motorcycle Tools => Topic started by: scottg on January 11, 2012, 01:13:43 PM

Title: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: scottg on January 11, 2012, 01:13:43 PM
 Let me just gloat for a pal. 
I just stole this picture!! heehehe

 My good buddy Roy posted it on Galoot Image Central. It was his Christmas Galootaclause perfect handle project.
 G-clause sent him an abused PH driver and a scrap of rosewood..... sooooooo
  yours Scott
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: Papaw on January 11, 2012, 04:31:26 PM
Very nice! I like his workbench top as well!
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: Fins/413 on January 11, 2012, 04:40:09 PM
Very nice
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: johnsironsanctuary on January 11, 2012, 10:16:28 PM
Great looking tool! Bet there is a story that goes with the bench top.
JIS
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: Neals on January 12, 2012, 12:52:31 AM
Thats a beauty!
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: 64longstep/Brian on January 12, 2012, 06:19:35 PM
Nice!!
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: lauver on January 15, 2012, 01:14:11 AM
scottg,

That handle is sweet.  Roy did himself proud.

Your thread gave me a wood stock idea.  I've got to remove an old rosemary bush and some of the branches and leaders are 2-4 inches in diameter.

Have you ever used rosemary stock for a handle?

Should I cut it to workable lengths while it's green?

Should I strip the bark and rip it while green?

How long should I dry it before using it to make a handle?

Are there reasons not to use rosemary?
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: lauver on January 24, 2012, 02:58:24 PM
scottg,

PM sent. Check your messages.
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: Branson on January 25, 2012, 07:45:59 AM

>Should I cut it to workable lengths while it's green?

Not if you mean exact lengths.  You still may get seasoning checks at the ends.

>Should I strip the bark and rip it while green?

Yes.  You want as much surface area as possible for the wood to dehydrate.

>How long should I dry it before using it to make a handle?

The old standard is one year per inch of thickness.

>Are there reasons not to use rosemary?

Probably not, unless you are superstitious.  Rosemary is symbolic of death, and remembrance.
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: lauver on January 25, 2012, 06:59:00 PM
Branson,

Thanks for the info.  I jumped the gun while waiting for answers.  Have been doing a few prelim experiments with rosemary wood.  So far it looks promising.
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: rusty on January 25, 2012, 08:16:44 PM

So...I'm sitting here reading this thread, and it occurs to me that I don't know if rosemary is a shrub or a tree. Many spices are shrubs, so I figure it's a 50/50...

So I google 'rosemary wood'

And discover that Rose Mary Woods was President Nixons secretary....

Ehhh....

Gotta love google....LOL!

(oh, turns out to be a tree....)
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: lauver on January 25, 2012, 09:28:45 PM
rusty,

Rosewood is a tree. Rosemary is a shrub, about 4' tall, highly aromatic. 

Never seen a rosewood tree; they must not grow in tejas.
Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: rusty on January 25, 2012, 09:50:19 PM

Hmm,so it is, serves me right for not going to a better source.
There are sure a lot of folks selling rosemary trees......
(apparently trying to pawn them off as christmas tree substitutes, i suppose no one wants a christmas shrub -P)

Title: Re: Roys rosewood PH
Post by: lauver on January 26, 2012, 12:01:47 PM
rusty,

"It's a fine line between a large shrub and a small tree." (Gary Lauver, 2012)

I believe the miniture rosemary christmas trees are grown and shaped specifically for christmas sales.  It's a marketing gimmick, plain and simple. 

That said, rosemary shrubs are a truely great plant. They live to be 100 years old with just minimal maintenance.  They are evergreen, drought hardy, can handle summer heat, and yet are also winter hardy.  They make an excellent ornamental speciman as well as a culinary herb.

I have three rosemary bushes in my yard, one right outside my back door so I can get to it easily when I'm cooking.  I also recommend them all the time to my landscape customers.  And, none of my customers have ever complained about these low maintenance plants.

Time will tell, but rosemary may just turn out to be a good wood stock to use for making replacement Perfect Handles.  Stay tuned....