Birch Tar that didn't set hard

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jon r

Native
Apr 7, 2006
1,197
9
35
England, midlands
www.jonsbushcraft.com
I made some birch tar about a year ago and it's still not set :confused: It should set in mins not years!

Why could this be?

I want to make some more soon and dont want the same think to happen again so is there anything i could have possibly done wrong? :)

Jon
 
Jon,

if you made your birch bark tar my dry distillation it will “never” „set“ by it’s own. You have to simmer (no boiling, attention, this is a very dangerous procedure!!!) for many and many an hour until it becomes very thick …..
 
I think by dry distillation he means that you heated the bark until the oil was released....sort of baked it with an escape hole for the oil to drain from and something for it to drain into. What you did basically speaking was producing birch oil by dry distilation although it isn't really distillation if that makes sence? :)

As for it being danerous to boil it....It's a bit like simmering birch or maple sap down to make it thicker and into syrup but because you are doing it with oil you stand a very fair chance of the almost boiling (simmering) oil bursting into flames and the very last thing you want is to spill any of the hot oil on the fire!!!!!

If you just simmer it and simmer it then it should eventually thicken up and when it's thick enough it should set hard when cooled.

Hope that helps,

Bam. :D
 
Freeze it…..:-) just kidding. It will never set just by letting it “dry”. The only way for it to „set“ is to simmer it until it becomes “hard” when cooled down. For applying the tar, reheat small quantities and apply hot, than let it cool down – in fact it will cool down / tighten very very fast (almost as fast as cyanoacrylate) and you have to be quite fast applying it / working with it.

Manufacturing birch bark tar is quite an art as well as a tremendous amount of work. In fact I’ve never ever seen real birch bark tar elsewhere than in very small quantities made by friends. The pitch that is sold as birch bark tar is very often nothing else than pitch made from cork oak [Quercus suber].

To my opinion, real birch bark tar, if not made in industrial quantities would be very expensive (more expensive than epoxy) regarding the labour involved in the manufacturing process.

Any other opinions?
 
jon r said:
Thanks for the info! Are there other ways to collect birch tar which allow it to set straight away when cooled?

From a chemist's perspective, it sounds like there are other volatile oils mixed in with the bit you want, preventing it from "setting", as you call it. There are two basic ways to purify things; distillation and solvent extraction. Boiling off the volatile bits is distillation without capturing the volatile fraction, reserving only the stuff that boils at higher temperatures.

Solvent extraction doesn't require the boiling and can take relatively little time, but you would have to know what solvents to use to separate the bits you want from the bits you don't. This really only works well when you're trying to produce a pure fraction of a particular chemical; I'm certain your birch tar, even when 'purified', is still a mixture of a whole variety of compounds. That complicates matters greatly and really puts the whole technique back into the lab, unless you've got a whole bunch of raw material and a variety of solvents to play with.

On the whole, boiling it down is probably the answer, as time consuming and challenging as it is. Sorry.
 
Jon,

just to water your mouth …. :-)

Pure Birch bark tar, hard, not flexible, you can’t push your thumb into it.
Pure tar

Birch bark tar with ashes, hard like hard rubber, difficult to push your thumb into it but “flexible”. This one is dull but will become as brilliant as pure birch bark tar once reheated.
Tar with ashes
 
Nice stuff Hartung :D

Jon r you haven't said what you were thinking of using the tar for. It's usual to mix it with fine charcoal if it's to be used like a glue since this helps to stop it shattering. It is an excellent material with a very long history. Boiling it is always a pain since the fumes it gives off are flammable.
If you intend to use it in soaps and the like please be aware that it is considered carcinogenic. I can provide the links if you need them.

cheers,
Toddy
 
Pipistrelle said:
Mix in some hot pine resin (remove all the impurities first), hey presto setting tar and boy is it strong, but takes a while to collect enoufgh resin.

sounds like a good idea. Ive used pine resin before but there are usually a lot of impurities. Is there an easy way to remove all the bits of wood, bark, chaf etc?

Maybe a metal sive would work well if it didnt set too fast. What are your thoughts?

Jon
 
jon r said:
sounds like a good idea. Ive used pine resin before but there are usually a lot of impurities. Is there an easy way to remove all the bits of wood, bark, chaf etc?

Maybe a metal sive would work well if it didnt set too fast. What are your thoughts?

Jon

You can filter most anything if you can keep it liquid long enough, which can be a trick with stuff like natural resins and tars. :) I might suggest trying to get your pine resin nice and liquid and keeping it hot enough that it is liquid but not boiling. The sediments should settle to the bottom of your pan, allowing you to decant off the good stuff. You might also be able to filter it through a metallic strainer or seive, perhaps lined with cheesecloth? You'll need to be working with a good amount because you'll lose some in the process.

I don't actually know all that much about birch tar per se; I did a chemistry degree so am approaching it from a scientific angle. :)
 

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