Kinda on topic, so:
Per Doc’s suggestion that I do something of a more physical nature to help slow the advance of a bloody awful neurological malfunction, I decided to take up a good ole timey woodworking style that utilizes very few power tools. I have accumulated a fair collection of what was first cheap junk but is now a much better quality set of tools and have been getting a feel for how to setup and use them. I think I’m now ready to attempt my first “real” project of building a shooting bench for use with a Sinclair mechanical front rest/rear bag combo that will accommodate both right and left handed shooters.
It will have a heavy I-section trestle end front and a single rear leg base cut out of 4x4 and 4x6 and the top from 2x12 stock with more 2x for stretchers and tenoned breadboard ends. Since it will live outdoors I chose pressure treated southern yellow pine fresh from Lowe’s and still all but dripping wet from the treatment. The stock is rough cut to longer than finished length and has been piled stickered inside my air conditioned cracker box house for about two weeks now. Once the stock gets past the worst of the twisting cupping drying mess I will attack it with my pretty new tools and see if I can pull off the fairly complex joinery that I dreamed into the design. Much of the design was done so it will be able (I hope) to handle the moisture induced dimensional changes from being left outside in the weather after completion.
My stupid rooky question is, roughly how long should I allow my air conditioned environment to help draw out the excess moisture before I attempt to flatten, square, and cut the joints in the stock? I’ve seen especially 5/4 decking and 4x4 in PTSYP from the same Lowe’s continue to do some really crazy stuff long after being put into a deck while still wet. I expect to have to plane the top back reasonably flat a time or two after completion but I don’t want to watch the whole structure destroy itself just because I couldn’t wait. I want it as nice as I turn out to be capable of but I’m not shooting for furniture quality and have function and solid as primary goals.
Any thoughts or advice will be appreciated.