As I sit here tonight with a massive sliver of some exotic wood in my hand, I realized that all but a few pair of the Tiny Radials that Bob helped me build are already gone. The longest a pair stayed on the site was 1 hour and 54 minutes.
The wish list has grown to nearly a hundred so far, and message received. The winter will have some cozy hours in the shop making more Tiny Radials.
To keep it interesting I purchased four more exotic woods for Tiny Radials. It turns out that "bowl blanks" for wood turning are ideal for a pair. I get the 7x7x2 if I want no room for error, or the 8x8x3 if I want a lot of room, but then I get greedy and make two pair with zero room for error...
It has been fun to explore the different woods. It's amazing the variety. Also I can't think of any other way that I could experience so many different hardwoods, so that has been great.
With the Tiny Radials I have been leaning towards heavier / denser woods because so far they have seemed to have more bass and can be played louder without dancing on the table.
One of the blanks I purchased was this one: Bloodwood, shown below.

This was a real surprise. Of all the woods so far, including Wenge, this is by FAR the winner of the dense wars. I couldn't believe it when I picked this up... A concrete block the same size I doubt would have been as heavy.
When you cut it, the pitch is so high it sounds like Porcelain China. When I sanded it, it became so polished that it looked finished and waxed. I only used half the block by using a thinner bandsaw blade and making the panels .25 inches thick.
Wanting to to protect the wax sealed remained after I cut it, I did what I normally do and painted the cut face with linseed oil. I came back 24 hours later and the oil was still basically wet, none of it had soaked into the wood and this was on a rough cut face.
So yea, it is despite being thinner than normal, by far the heaviest pair of Tiny Radials. I glued some of the cut off back to the inside of the enclosure doubling the thickness to 1/2 inch at the base...
Believe it or not, between the Zen Master Series Baffles, the Caintuck Audio Baffles, and the Tiny Radials I am starting to develop and ear for the different woods and how they effect the sound. I guess that's my present for being a year older. ::)
It is nevertheless fascinating and I'm predicting this will be my favorite sounding pair but I could be totally wrong because the pitch will be so high if the energy does overwhelm the mass it could wreck the midrange.
We will see.
Apparently some A-hole named Decware purchased all the drivers, so now we wait for more to arrive. ;)
Anyway, getting back to the wood... I knew as soon as I slid this 3 inch block across my Jointer that it was special. It must have a lot of oil or natural waxes in it because it does not take a finish well. I already know from what happened when I sanded it to 220 and it got shiny that if I continued up to 1000 grit and then buffed it would have looked like it was finished.
Steve