A correct understanding of the principles of drying is rare, and opinions in regard to the subject are very diverse. The same lack of knowledge exists in regard to dry kilns. The physical properties of the wood which complicate the drying operation and render it distinct from that of merely evaporating free water from some substance like a piece of cloth must be studied experimentally. It cannot well be worked out theoretically.
SECTION X
HOW WOOD IS SEASONED
Methods of Drying
The choice of a method of drying depends largely upon the object in view. The principal objects may be grouped under three main heads, as follows:
- 1. To reduce shipping weight.
- 2. To reduce the quantity necessary to carry in stock.
- 3. To prepare the wood for its ultimate use and improve its qualities.
When wood will stand the temperature without excessive checking or undue shrinkage or loss in strength, the first object is most readily attained by heating the wood above the boiling point in a closed chamber, with a large circulation of air or vapor, so arranged that the excess steam produced will escape. This process manifestly does not apply to many of the hardwoods, but is applicable to many of the softwoods. It is used especially in the northwestern part of the United States, where Douglas fir boards one inch thick are dried in from 40 to 65 hours, and sometimes in as short a time as 24 hours. In the latter case superheated steam at 300 degrees Fahrenheit was forced into the chamber but, of course, the lumber could not be heated thereby much above the boiling point so long as it contained any free water.
This lumber, however, contained but 34 per cent moisture to start with, and the most rapid rate was 1.6 per cent loss per hour.
The heat of evaporation may be supplied either by superheated steam or by steam pipes within the kiln itself.
The quantity of wood it is necessary to carry in stock is naturally reduced when either of the other two objects is attained and, therefore, need not necessarily be discussed.