Mora Wood

Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad

great12b4ever

Member
Joined
Jul 22, 2007
Messages
1,196
Location
Houston, Texas, USA.
I have recently acquired a small board of Mora wood fairly inexpensively. There is more available. Has anyone turned or worked with Mora wood before? If so, how did it turn? This particular piece has some nice inter-locking grain pattern and is not nearly as plain looking as the pictures at Hobbit? Just curious as to whether I should pick up more or not?
 
Signed-In Members Don't See This Ad
Mora wood is very dense and hard wood I believe some people call it Argentina Osage...I have turned several turkey calls from this wood and as I recalled the wood turned very well providing the tools are sharp...it should make an interesting pen or wine stopper.
 
COMMON NAMES: Mora, Mora amarilla, amarello, taiuva, fustic.
[NOTE: There is at least one other species, Chlorophora tinctoria that is also known as mora.]
SPECIFIC GRAVITY: Variable: 0.71-0.78

DENSITY:

TANGENTIAL MOVEMENT: 5.40%

RADIAL MOVEMENT: 3.40%

VOLUMETRIC SHRINKAGE: 7.80%

DURABILITY: Very decay resistant

SOURCE: Found sporatically throught Latin America from southern Mexico to Argentina, but not plentiful anywhere.

DESCRIPTION: Dense, fine textured, bright yellow in color, turning to light reddish orange with exposure. Produces a yellow dye used to stain cloth. Good resistance to wear, turns well, used for tool handles and furniture parts.



200824174345_mora.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom