bit of history

After renovating the Barnegat Light train station, we saved all the timbers that werent rotted or bug infested and heres a table I made .... just an off the top guess but these timbers are probably 300 yrs old.

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table

Nice job! Who built the station LIRR or a predecessor? Any pictures of the station there are a few FRN's here
 
Beautiful work!

Man, that's great! The wood and the work are terrific. Plus you're all green: "reduce, re-use, recycle." :beer:
Dave
 
That type of talent is a gift from god...most us can't cut a straight line with an edge guide!!!!!

Beautiful work!!!:beer:
 
Nice work, Slingshot...let's see...300 yrs ago we were still colonizing the new territory...Ben Franklin hadn't been born yet!!...
 
Beautiful, absolutely beautiful. It is amazing how long wood can last. My Dad took some of the old timbers from our nearly 200 year old cottage when it was being renovated, took them to a lumber yard and had them planed and tehy looked like they had just been cut. He then varnished them and used them for stair railings in the renovated cottage.
 
From one wood guy to another nice work. Before the varnish it looked like cedar or doug fir, after it looks more like yellow pine. How big were the timbers? What species?

The handrail and spindles on the deck look like wrc but the decking looks like composite. Looks great and lasts but lacks the character of the real stuff imo.
 
From one wood guy to another nice work. Before the varnish it looked like cedar or doug fir, after it looks more like yellow pine. How big were the timbers? What species?

The handrail and spindles on the deck look like wrc but the decking looks like composite. Looks great and lasts but lacks the character of the real stuff imo.


Its some sort of fir ,probably hemlock , fairly soft wood and yes the rails were western red cedar and the decking is Azek composite , for this project i think it was a good solution.:happy:
 
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