kieronriley
Well-Known Member
does anyone have any idea of how i might be able to identify teak,i have just aquired a few tabe top size pieces of what i think is teak but how can i be sure,thanks.kieron
There are a couple of other timbers that can look similar, afromosia and iroko. All three have a distinctive smell when cut - afromosia is slightly aromatic, perfumed, and iroko is peppery and unpleasant. Also, if your table tops came from a school it's more likely to be iroko - thousands of such tables , with beech underframes, were produced in the 60's and 70's for science and cookery rooms.
Post a photo, but bear in mind that any surface finish can be misleading.
Some teak shown on this page, top 2 photos.
Iroko generally has a very interlocked grain. it also creates a dust when cut that can, with some people, lead to bleeding.
Where you "acquired" it would probably be a good indicator of whether it's likely to be teak. (However you might not like to say.) It's a good few decades since lumps of teak that size were available at any even nearly reasonable cost.does anyone have any idea of how i might be able to identify teak,i have just aquired a few tabe top size pieces of what i think is teak but how can i be sure,thanks.kieron
Where you "acquired" it would probably be a good indicator of whether it's likely to be teak. (However you might not like to say.) It's a good few decades since lumps of teak that size were available at any even nearly reasonable cost.
I have one huge piece which came out of a shipbreakers yard in the 1960's when the Cunarders were being decommissioned. I never have a use for a bit that big and can't bear to cut it. It is 2.2 metres by 0.8 by 30mm. It'll probably still be in my workshop when I die!
does anyone have any idea of how i might be able to identify teak,i have just aquired a few tabe top size pieces of what i think is teak but how can i be sure,thanks.kieron