Bending Wood Denver CO

When most of us hear the words "bending wood," we think of steam bending. The wood is heated briefly in low-pressure steam to soften the lignin (a glue-like protein that holds the cellulose fibers together). While the wood is still hot, it's clamped into a bending form. Read and get more tips on how to bend the wood the wright way.

Frank Paxton Lumber Company - Woodcrafter's Store
303-399-6047
4837 Jackson Street PO Box 16343
Denver, CO
Woodcraft - Denver, CO
303-290-0007
6770 S. Peoria St
Centennial, CO
ABC Supply Co.,Inc/Denver
303-297-8368
2401 E 40th Ave Denver, CO, 80205
Denver, CO
Empire Staple Co
303-433-6803
1710 Platte St Denver, CO, 80202
Denver, CO
ABC Supply Co., Inc./Denver
303-293-2700
2401 E 40th Ave Denver, CO, 80205
Denver, CO
Rockler Woodworking and Hardware #3
(303) 782-0588
2553 S. Colorado Blvd. Suite 108
Denver, CO
Ninth Avenue Hardware CO
(303) 831-7066
1030 E 9th Ave, 9th & Corona, caddycorner from King Soopers
Denver, CO
12th Avenue Ace
(303) 355-2551
2640 E 12th Ave, 12th & Clayton, next to Zorba's
Denver, CO
Cherry Creek North
(303) 398-7766
2375 E 1St Ave
Denver, CO
Ace Hardware-Alameda Station
(303) 733-3200
417 S Broadway, Broadway at West Alameda Avenue
Denver, CO
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Bending Wood

Bending Wood the Wright Way

February 06, 2007
by  Nick Engler

In my mind, there are three classifications of woodworking techniques. There are many that I classify as “useful,” a smaller number that I think of as “indispensable,” and then a very few that represent a true breakthrough in woodworking technology. Bending wood is one of the latter.

The ability to alter the grain direction as our imagination dictates while preserving the strength inherent in a straight piece of wood allows us to create the elegant beauty of a continuous-arm Windsor chair and the inspiring sweep of a vaulted ceiling. We first explored our world in sailing ships with bent wood hulls, then left it in airplanes with bent wood wings. Our world would be much less beautiful and much less exciting without this simple woodworking technique.

I’m currently engaged in a woodworking project designed to create a little excitement, and bending wood is at the very heart of it. I’m part of a group of historians and aviators who are recreating the six experimental airplanes of the Wright brothers, beginning with their model glider of 1899 and ending with the 1905 Wright Flyer 3, the first practical airplane. The frames of these primitive aircraft are a collection of bent wood parts — ribs, wing ends, braces and skids — ingeniously arranged to catch the wind and lift a man into the air.

True Geniuses Prefer Cold Bending

When most of us hear the words “bending wood,” we think of steam bending. The wood is heated briefly in low-pressure steam to soften the lignin (a glue-like protein that holds the cellulose fibers together). While the wood is still hot, it’s clamped into a bending form. The cellulose fibers telescope to conform to the curve, and the lignin cools to hold them in place. Or almost. In actual practice, the fibers never quite conform, and when you remove the wood from the bending form, there is a great deal of springback — the wood loses some of its curve. If the wood is not attached to the other parts in the project so as to hold the curve, it may continue to relax and it will spring back even more. This problem plagued the Wright brothers while they were doing their glider experiments — they calculated precise curves for the ribs to fly as efficiently as possible, only to have the ribs relax and lose a good deal of curvature before they could get their gliders in the air.

To solve this problem, they eventually abandoned steam bending for an early form of cold bending. They arranged the parts of the ribs for their Flyers in a bending form, then nailed them together with brads. They could not use glue — the adhesives 100 years ago were not weatherproof. A good rain and the wings would have come apart.

Fortunately, we have a much larger and more reliable selection of adhesives to choose from than the Wrights. We decided to make the bent w...

Click here to read the rest of this article from Popular Woodworking Magazine