Thanks for all the replies everyone! Especially as per @GeorgeWest ‘s reply, I’m realizing it might be a lot easier for me to just state my project specifics and get your thoughts from there.
For my upcoming project of building my own spearguns using teak, I won’t be using singular pieces of teak- instead, it’s multiple pieces I’ll be epoxying together into a laminated blank. This is the norm for teak speargun builds, since laminating allows you to run the grain direction opposite in adjacent boards which counteracts warping/expansion forces that are likely, given that this will be frequently submerged in saltwater. Here is a pretty useful blog documenting the process:
https://aoshunspearfishing.com/blogs/news/speargun-building-101-making-blanksIn my particular case, my current plan is to have a total thickness of 2.75”, using 3 plies of teak. 2.75/3= 0.916. With that said, it seems like a wise idea to have a blank that is thicker than just 2.75”, so if it warps at all during the epoxy-cure hanging phase, or otherwise needs to be redimensioned at all, I’ve got room to spare. Looking at close fractions, 15/16 =0.9375, meaning that if I were to make a laminate out of 3 boards each 15/16” thick, I’d end up with an end laminate thickness of 2.8125”, which leaves me with 1/16” of reserve on the final blank, which should be enough to account for any re-milling that needs to occur if the blank goes off perfectly straight during its curing process.
Interestingly, the outstanding challenge has been sourcing high quality teak. For those who don’t know: in the past teak has typically been sourced from Burma, or by it’s modern name, Myanmar. Due to some political conflicts maybe a decade or more back, the US stopped allowing the import of Myanmar goods, including Burmese teak lumber. As a result, the US market has resorted to sourcing teak from other countries. This is typically referred to as plantation teak, because these other countries are planting it in massive quantities with the sole goal of producing lumber, and are subsequently cutting down these trees the minute they are big enough for their lumber goals. The unfortunate byproduct is that these young growth trees have nowhere near as good properties as the older growth stuff. I’ve seen it with my own eyes- the grain density isn’t even half what an old growth piece would have. This higher porosity, paired with lower natural oils in the younger wood, makes it less dense, more likely to warp in boating/marine applications, largely defeats the point of using teak.
As for where that leaves me, in trying to source higher quality teak- I either have to track down pieces that have been sitting unused since before the ban, or look through lumber yards hoping to find the occasional piece that has higher grain density than the rest of the new-growth stock. This also significantly cuts down on what dimensions I am able to find the higher quality stuff in. For instance, I went to a pretty well-stocked lumber yard in the Bronx (NYC), they had quite a fair bit of teak, but a ton of it was new growth stuff, and the old growth boards I was able to find were either 0.75-1” or 1.5-2+”, nothing in the 5/4” category. If I’m seeking a milled thickness of 15/16, and I don’t have a bandsaw for resawing, that means those boards would be either not thick enough, or too thick such that I’m either trying to resaw it on a table saw or just running it on a planer a bunch, either way, wasting a lot of money buying unnecessarily thick material to start.
Then, I stumbled upon a guy on facebook marketplace, much closer to me than that lumberyard was, selling some teak boards. In the photos where he’s holding a measuring tape against them, they are clearly 1-1/16” thick. Also, while I have yet to inspect them in person, the photos he’s sent me indicate that the grain density isn’t as awfully sparse as some of the boards I’ve seen in other places, such as that Bronx lumber yard. Seems like these were either a lucky batch post-Burma ban, or maybe he’s had them sitting around since before then, not sure. Assuming they look as good in person, I could see myself buying them for my first speargun build.
The question becomes then, is it likely that I’ll be able to take 1-1/16” boards and mill them to square at 15/16”?
I know a big part of milling also comes down to board length. This guy is selling boards in 6’,7’, and 11’. I am going to be making hybrid spearguns, so instead of a 48” long speargun needing a 48” long piece of teak, it would have, say, a 24” long piece of teak, a 24” long carbon fiber tube that is inserted 6” into the back teak stock, and a 10” teak muzzle that is inserted 4” into the carbon fiber tube (24+24+10 total, -6-4 accounting for overlaps, so 48” total). Hence, my point being, the blanks wouldn’t have to be as long as the end length of the design. But with that said, it would certainly be easier if I could laminate one long blank, take it over to the miter saw, and cut out multiple small parts, as opposed to needing separate glueups for each component. But, I believe that a bowed 6’ board would lose less thickness correcting than a bowed 11’ board would. So if I had to resort to cutting to length pre-milling for the sake of preserving thickness, that would be an option too.
With all this out of the way: do you all think it would be possible for me to start with a 1-1/16” board and get it milled up at or before the thickness is reduced to 15/16”?