
This is an excerpt from “Cut & Dried” by Richard Jones.
Oven drying in a microwave oven takesĀ between 20 and 45 minutes. The averageĀ time is 30 minutes. It saves a great deal ofĀ time compared to drying wood in a regularĀ oven. It does, however, require care andĀ attention to details. Poor methodologyĀ and mistakes in the procedure usually leadĀ to problems and failure.
You will need to be able to weigh theĀ wood samples. I find electronic postalĀ scales purchased at a reasonable cost fromĀ an office supplier work well enough forĀ my needs. If you require more accuracy,Ā more expensive scales are required. MyĀ scales provide readings in 1 gramme divisionsĀ from zero up to a maximum ofĀ 2,200 grammes, and the machine can beĀ set to give readings in either grammes orĀ ounces.
To dry the wood I use a turntable-typeĀ microwave oven with several power settings.Ā The only two settings I use are theĀ very lowest setting and the next higherĀ setting which is ādefrostā ā your oven isĀ likely to have a different configuration.Ā But whatever marked settings are available,Ā restrict yourself to the lowest one orĀ two power levels. As the wood is heated,Ā moisture evaporates from all exposed surfaces,Ā including the bottom face restingĀ on the turntable; three to five paper kitchenĀ towels laid under the wood absorb andĀ dissipate the condensed moisture drawnĀ downward from the wood. If youāre testingĀ several samples, make sure they donātĀ touch each other because this can concentrateĀ the energy and can lead to smokingĀ and possibly fire.
If the wood starts to smoke during theĀ drying procedure the sample is ruined andĀ you need to start again with a new sample.Ā Smoking during the cooking meansĀ you have burnt away some of the woodĀ volume, so weight measurements takenĀ thereafter are inaccurate. This is why IĀ mostly restrict myself to the lowest powerĀ setting and short bursts of heat. The secondĀ lowest power setting, defrost on myĀ microwave oven, is seldom used, but I doĀ sometimes use it for the initial drying cycleĀ of very wet wood.
The ideal wood sample is the same asĀ described in section 6.6, i.e., a full thicknessĀ and width piece taken at least 400Ā mm in from the boardās end, approximatelyĀ 25 to 32 mm (1″ to 1-1/4″) long. WeighĀ your sample and make a note of this. IfĀ the sample is already partially dried, e.g.,Ā about 25 percent MC to 15 percent MC,Ā cook the wood at the lowest oven settingĀ for between one and a half and two minutesĀ in the first cycle.
If you know the wood is already belowĀ 10 percent MC, I recommend you cookĀ it at the lowest setting of the oven for noĀ more than 45 or 60 seconds to start with.
When wood is definitely very wet, 30Ā percent MC or above, the first cookingĀ should last no more than between one andĀ a half and three minutes with the oven atĀ the second lowest setting. Even in this circumstanceĀ I prefer to use the lowest ovenĀ setting. It takes a few minutes longer toĀ dry the wood but is preferable to startingĀ again because of a burnt sample.
After the first cycle, weigh the sampleĀ or samples again to form an impressionĀ of how quickly the wood loses weight, i.e.Ā loses water. Let the sample rest for a minuteĀ or so and re-cook it for between 45Ā and 60 seconds and re-weigh.
Continue with this routine until youĀ canāt measure any weight change, i.e., lessĀ than 0.1 of a gramme variation if you areĀ using highly accurate scales. My scalesĀ read only to the nearest gramme, so I stopĀ cooking when five or six low-weight readingsĀ are recorded.
When this point is reached, use the formulaĀ provided earlier, i.e., MC percent =Ā ((WW – ODW) / ODW) x 100, whereĀ WW is wet weight of the sample, andĀ ODW represents the wood sampleās ovenĀ dry weight.
The following cautions are important:Ā Do not use the microwave ovenās highĀ power settings. The internal heat built upĀ in the wood needs to dissipate, and highĀ settings cause rapid heat build up, smokeĀ and even fire.
The more wood tested in one go, theĀ more time is required to complete theĀ job. This is useful because after the initialĀ heating of a large batch you can rotateĀ from one sample to the next in theĀ oven with short bursts of cooking for eachĀ piece. This gives each sample a break betweenĀ heating cycles, thus reducing theĀ chance of overheating any one piece.
I generally find kiln-dried wood samplesĀ react differently to cooking thanĀ green or air-dried samples. Itās best notĀ to mix samples of very different moistureĀ contents and different wood species duringĀ the test, but itās possible if you proceedĀ with care.
Being sure the wood sample or samplesĀ is, or are, truly oven dry requires patienceĀ and careful weighing using accurateĀ scales. Itās better, and safer, to use severalĀ short cycles in the oven at low settingsĀ than it is to try and rush the job using aĀ higher setting for extended times. The latterĀ strategy usually results in burning theĀ wood and failure.
In closing, these final, following warningsĀ probably seem obvious, but theyāreĀ worth mentioning. Removing cookedĀ wood from the oven requires care. ItāsĀ usually quite hot, and can and does burnĀ skin ā you probably donāt need to ask howĀ I know that! Use an oven glove or heavyĀ leather work gloves. Also, be aware that atĀ the end of testing, and unknown to you,Ā wood might have charred on the inside:Ā It can smoulder and burn and, if placedĀ in a rubbish bin, could start a fire. CarefulĀ disposal is essential. The safest thing youĀ can do is put the cooked wood in waterĀ when youāve finished drying it to ensureĀ it doesnāt burst into flames later ā it canĀ happen.
ā Meghan B.

Drying a wood below the ambient percentage for its intended enviroment may cause a big problem. Too dry might make it difficult to adjust. Too wet gives the best shot to acclimate. This is especially critical with wood veneers.
Meghan,
Could you speak to those of us who turn wood (green) and perhaps want to dry the wood (via your method) before turning?
Nice Science Fair project!
Please consider using American English spelling in your articles. Gram not frame and grams not grammar. Thanks.
Its an excerpt from a book written by a Brit and targeted at both an American and British audience. This American can comprehend it just fine.
Well, as the author of the excerpt above, and, er, British to boot, Meghan didn’t create the text. She simply took my British English, and photograph, and popped them on here.
I, like you, assume Neil posted with tongue-in-cheek. However, I accept there may be a language barrier because something Neil wrote has me flummoxed. I’m guessing it’s a form of American English or some sort of American idiom Neil used when he wrote: “Gram not frame and grams not grammar.”
Can Neil, or anyone else please translate that for me in the name of clarity and the reduction of misunderstanding across nations (even if that is just across the Atlantic), ha, ha. Richard.
Sorry, I’m not quite sure how I ended up posting two messages that are almost identical. However, it’s happened, and I don’t think I can simply delete one. Richard.
I believe the spelling checker is at fault here. I’ve been munging English for half a century and I can’t make heads or tails. I believe the criticism “Gram not frame and grams not grammar” is supposed to be “gram, not gramme and grams not grammes”. I could be way off base; I usually try to adapt to what is around me rather than insist everything change for me. š
Good thought. That hadn’t occurred to me because I’m not much into things like texting and using my smartphone’s full capabilities. I can’t recall how many months ago it was I last accessed the internet with my phone. And speelcheekers (sic) don’t exactly fill me with confidence, so I don’t rely on them, ha, ha. Richard.
Surely you jest? I can’t really imagine a spelling critique such as this being anything but wry humour.
I thought the British spelling was “Graham.”
No, thatās a cracker
I have used microwave drying in the past when making large bowls. I found the hard way that even at the lower settings you have to run the oven for short periods with time for the temperature to spread through the wood.
I got over confident after the first two bowls worked well and let the third bowl run a full two minutes. It looked okay until I was turning off the spigot. That was the thickest portion of the bowls rough shape. As I cut it away I broke into a charred pocket in the wood. The center section reached kindling temperature. The cherry wood bowl was ruined.
People, please read carefully and use your brain. The article describes how to determine MC, not how to season your lumber.
Exactly! The sample size was only an inch long!
That would be a fair sized board for Marco
I guess this is my week for somewhat abstruse humor. š
Be very careful drying wood in a microwave! I had a piece of white oak, about 2″ X 2″ X 8″ I was experimenting with. Started with a low setting, and through the microwave’s glass door, I could see moisture leaching out. I stepped away for a few minutes and returned to find the kitchen smelling like a campfire, with smoke starting to emerge from the oak. Grabbed the wood (way too hot to touch), took it out side to our firepit, and smoke was then pouring out both ends. The wood continued to burn from the inside out, neatly coring the piece.
I regularly use the mic for my bowls, but usually only a 1/4 inch thick evenly throughout the whole bowl turned green . Only a minute at a time, Maybe twice on the lowest setting. This allows me to start sanding right away. Itās a slow process , but I enjoy it. Never burnt anything this way. Always weighing in between
???
Yes. š