Jay - Guessing your talking about sourcing some southern yellow pine to re-board your stake body truck bed? That topic best belongs in our Making a Stovebolt Bed forum, so your post has been moved there for further conversation and help.
BTW - It will help others help you if you provide more specific on what truck your are working on to help best answer your questions.
~ Dan 1951 Chevy 3 window 3100 Follow this story in the DITY Gallery "My Grandpa Carl's Truck and How it Became Mine" 1966 Chevelle (Wife's Hot Rod) | 2013 Chevy Silverado (Current daily driver) US Army MSG Retired (1977-1998) | Com Fac Maint Lead Tech Retired (1998-2021)
There are several sawmills owned by the Amish/Mennonite community here in middle Tennessee that do custom sawing for projects such as yours. My son bought a big load of rough-sawn oak to build a deck behind his home from one of them. You might also check with John M. to see if he knows of similar businesses in his former neighborhood in southern Maryland that might be a bit closer to you. Jerry
"It is better to be silent and be thought a fool than to speak and eliminate all doubt!" - Abraham Lincoln Cringe and wail in fear, Eloi- - - - -we Morlocks are on the hunt! There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self. - Ernest Hemingway Love your enemies and drive 'em nuts!
There is some reclaimed timber (underwater) if you want old growth long leaf southern yellow pine wood like this. Check Tallahassee Fl. I used to dive for one of loggers long ago. We would find axe cut sinkers. These we found are long leaf yellow pine which I don`t think is available much. The slash and loblolly's make up the yellow pine offered today. Long leaf yellow pine would be what was used originally.
Those would be pricey ,remember watching a documentary on the logs being brought up from the lakes were they flowed the logs after being cut and some of them were worth 40,000 for the Birds Eye maple for making classical instruments .
Jay -- In PA, you are closer to the heart of the Plain Community (Lancaster County) than most of us are. I have not yet connected with the Plain Community here. The community we left had several Mennonite and Amish mills that would do custom milling ... but you had to bring them the logs.
Search out woodworking sites and forums to see if there's any info on old pines like that. But for some of that tight grained long leafed southern pine ... IF you find it, I bet it's going to be some pricey stuff.
I doubt I will have to replace my truck's original bedwood in my lifetime (and, for that matter, my grandson won't likely need to replace it in his, either). But if I did, and I was going for originality ... which requires the wood to be coated with a black coating anyway .... I'd probably go with something like a mahogany or a redwood or even an oak which, when painted black, probably looks very similar to the original tight-grained long leafed southern pine anyway.
And if you're not going strict original and are planning on going with a glossy clear coating like a polyurethane or a spar varnish ... then you are already broken the "originality seal" so what's the point of the unobtanium wood?
Just something to consider... Not a sermon, just a thought (to quote Lon...)
Last edited by John Milliman; 03/17/20254:20 PM. Reason: horribal speling
~ John
"We are not now that strength which in old days Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are"
1948 International Farmall Super A 1949 Chevrolet 3804 In the Legacy Gallery | In the Gallery Forum 1973 IH 1310 Dump 2001 International/AmTran RE3000 "Skoolie" 2014 Ford E-350 4x4 (Quigley)
They are still finding logs diving in North Fla. You can surely obtain enough to do a bed. I have about enough left of what I used to do a bed. try these people....https://brunerlumber.com/pine some of the curly sinker looks interesting. get some of that 'kings wood" . I always wanted to do a bed from cypress wood. Already moisture resistant.
Wearing my hat as Editor/Publisher of this here web site ... harrumph ... I just sent them a note via their input page asking about pricing and dimensions on the long leaf southern pine. Their shop is only 5.5 hrs from HQ ...
I still think its going to be pricey stuff...
~ John
"We are not now that strength which in old days Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are"
1948 International Farmall Super A 1949 Chevrolet 3804 In the Legacy Gallery | In the Gallery Forum 1973 IH 1310 Dump 2001 International/AmTran RE3000 "Skoolie" 2014 Ford E-350 4x4 (Quigley)
Its wonderful wood. I bet I could make a knife from it... the angle and hardness. Very heavy. You have to keep soap and water on any blade/planer. I made this guitar out of a chunk. I stopped counting tree rings at 183. Its too heavy to wear.
I'll bet you could play some Metallica/Black Sabbath/Iron Maiden with that heavy guitar.
'57 GMC 102, Original 347 V8, HydraMatic, 3.08 rear gear, added A/C, disk front brakes, HEI, AFB carb, '98 Honda Black Currant paint. T-boned and totaled 10/12 '52 GMC 152 Stake Bed, Original 228, SM420, added A/C, HEI, disk front brakes, '67 Chev 3.55 rear gear. Gets used as a real truck.
Wonder if you could find some if you found someone salvaging an old barn or such? Perhaps in the bed of an old grain truck someone is scrapping or parting out?
I definitely see not spending money on rare submerged lumber if you are painting black.
However, I do think there’s a case to be made for sourcing some old lumber of some sort.
The way most lumber is milled today, even if it’s “dry”…is pretty prone to cupping and twisting and what not. I do like the idea of tighter-ringed old wood that got all the warping and twisting out of its system….many decades ago.
If I was gonna redo my bed wood and build my own, I would like use the laminated hardwood (kinda like butcher block or bowling lane) they use for semi trailer floors.
Durable and stable and not likely to twist/warp/etc. Stain opaque black with some sort of oil concoction.