Persimmon, the American ebony. Here is the Wood Data Base description of persimmon wood. Very wide sapwood is a white to pale yellowish-brown. Color tends to darken with age. Very thin heartwood (usually less than 1″ wide) is dark brown to black, similar to ebony. (Persimmon is in the same genus—Diospyros—as true ebonies.) More from the Wood Data Base. Common Name(s): Persimmon, White Ebony
Scientific Name: Diospyros virginiana
Distribution: Eastern United States
Tree Size: 60-80 ft (18-24 m) tall, 1-2 ft (.3-.6 m) trunk diameter
Average Dried Weight: 52 lbs/ft3 (835 kg/m3)
Specific Gravity (Basic, 12% MC): .74, .83
Janka Hardness: 2,300 lbf (10,230 N)
Modulus of Rupture: 17,700 lbf/in2 (122.1 MPa)
Elastic Modulus: 2,010,000 lbf/in2 (13.86 GPa)
Crushing Strength: 9,170 lbf/in2 (63.2 MPa)
Shrinkage: Radial: 7.9%, Tangential: 11.2%, Volumetric: 19.1%, T/R Ratio: 1.4
And finally a picture of a typical board.
Now to my story. A good friend, Steve Cunningham, gave me some short logs from a tree his neighbor cut down.
The tree was in Webster Grove, Missouri.
As you can see, not only were they bigger the normal, but the heartwood was much wider.
Sliced the logs in half, lengthwise with a chainsaw, then started the slow proscess of quartersawing with the chainsaw.
From here the boards were placed in my shop attic, carefully stickered together to dry. Fast forward 18 months or so and some of the boards were brought down for resawing. The dulcimer sized boards.
And of course, once you have thin stock, you start a build.
Will add more to this story as the build progresses. I still have quite a bit to resaw into ukulele stock.
And it is done.