Waterwheel build
Looking into redoing this waterwheel on my property. This was built by my grandfather 15+ years ago. He used waterever he had and would make all kinds of stuff. The wood on the side is plywood he used to form concrete with throughout the years, the inner ring is sheet metal welded together, oddball shaft and hubs, but has worked and still standing and will spin. (Very unbalanced but will spin) I would like to make the wheel out of wood and then have metal spokes.
I took measurements sketched it all out but I'm in a delima about what wood I should use. I located in ohio so cypress isn't much of an option. The next best I seen googleing would be white oak. I have plenty of white oak on the property and could cut some down, sawn up, and possibly kiln dried of thats the route I am directed. I just need help thinking this project over.
The overall height of the wheel is 10' tall. My idea was to divide the wheel into 8th. If I would use one solid piece of wood it would have to be 17" wide. Not going to find that in any box stores. I'm open to combining boards together to get my width needed to cut semi circles. Just throw me ideas. In my mind the paddles inside of the curved parts should keep it from warping and twisting but I've never built anything like this too..... the hill behind the waterwheel is another larger pond and we had a valve and trough to feed this waterwheel. I want to do the same but instead of draining the upper pond i would get a pump to circulate and feed the wheel. Any help, insight, advice would be awesome.
Ceiling stain color?
I’m putting a tongue and groove ceiling in my house and trying to replicate or get close to the color my grandparents had in their house when I was a child. I have a picture of the ceiling here - any idea what color stain would get close to this color? Thanks!