beekeeper said:
Does anybody know how much the moisture content of wetted wood rises, or how long it wood take it to redry? Would it dry to kiln dried standards or air dried. I would think air dried only. I know that air dried wood even sealed(epoxy) will dry more if stored in a climate cntrolled space.
beekeeper
In a kiln, you could dry wood to zero moisture content. But that would probably damage the wood, or at least create a situation where the wood would warp and twist when you brought it out into the world where the air is humid and the wood would immediately start soaking up moisture.
Realistically, wood moisture content ranges something like 5% to 15%, depending upon the environment it is in (furniture in an air conditioned house would tend to be lower moisture content, framing lumber would tend to be higher).
Kiln drying doesn't necessarily get the wood dryer, it just gets the wood to the desired range quicker.
Take a piece of wood and leave it in a particular environment for a while, and it will reach equilibrium. It might gain moisture content, or lose moisture content, depending upon the environment (heat, humidity), and depending upon how wet or dry the wood was to start with.
I guess the most important thing is to try to stabilize the moisture content at a reasonable level - low enough so organisms don't eat the wood (rot), and stable enough so that the item you built doesn't tend to tear itself apart from expansion and contraction due to changes in moisture content.
If you ever bought hardwood flooring from a seller who knew what he was doing, he would have cautioned you to let the flooring sit for days in the place where it was going to be installed. This was so that the flooring could reach equilibrium, and do all of its' shrinking or selling BEFORE you installed it. Install it when it is too wet, it will shrink up and give you gaps. Install it too dry, and it will swell up and warp.
Is that about clear as mud? ;o)
George