A video with today's technology would be interesting but I wonder how much you could really see. Part of good wood selection is by feel also. Ans also by weight. There is light, firm wood, which is what you want, and light punkish wood, which you don't for most applications. In SIG catalogs, there was always a sections on modeling basics, including wood selection and how the different grains are cut from a log. I have never seen it explained better. There was a lady named Esther as SIG years ago that graded and sorted wood, and she could tell you was the weight was just by picking a sheet up by the edges, in the middle of a sheet and bouncing it a bit, and be VERY close when actually weighed on a scale. Years ago, when I was first getting interested in free flight, I order some contest balsa from some where, asked for specific grain samples, and could they please mark what they were. I think it might have been Lone Star, but they did as I asked and I was able to see first hand what the good stuff was so when I checked out the local hobby shops and craft store displays, I new what I was looking for, and a small kitchen diet scale told me what was 4 to 6 pound stuff. There are all sorts of density charts on the internet these days, but I think the SIG web site has that stuff from the old catalogs on it now and can be down loaded.
Type at you later,
Dan McEntee
Type at you later,
Dan McEntee