I use a short steam box for bending ribs for kayaks. The ribs are 1/4 inch thick and 3/4 inches wide and usually less than two foot long. I use a long steam box for steaming coamings that go around the cockpit of the kayak. The wood for the coamings is about 7 feet long and 3/4 inches by 1-1/2 inches in cross section.
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You will need a coat hanger or a few feet of heavy wire as supports inside the steam box to keep the wood off the bottom so heat can get to it from all sides.
You will need a cooking pot. A two quart size is good for starters. You can fill it two thirds full and generate steam for several hours.
You will need a heat source. If you plan on working outdoors, a camping stove works fine. If you work indoors, you can use a hotplate. The hotplate I use runs 750 watts. That is hot enough for the three foot steambox I use and just hot enough for the 8 foot steam box.
Since first writing this Instructable, I have gotten my hands on a wallpaper steamer. It works much better than boiling water on a hotplate, mostly because it runs at a higher wattage and puts out more heat. If you can get a used one, go for it.









































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Should this work to bend something like a bamboo cane ? have you got any tip for bending bamboo canes ?
It's better to bend the cane when it's still green ?
Thanks a lot for the instructable anyway =)
Thanks for your dedication. Then I'm going to tell you how I did the bamboo bending ( or make an instructable for it)
good luck =)
Good Luck with your work =)
http://www.designboom.com/history/choi/22.jpg
Secondly, a 12 inch diameter by ten foot long pipe will take quite a good source of steam to get up to temperature. You will need something more than a one quart pot of water. Also, the pvc pipe loses heat, so if you put some insulation around it, you won't need as potent a heat source to get it up to temperature.
Thanks, pquin3
Your scheme for straightening the neck via steam and then locking it into a straight shape might work. And if it does, you would be the world expert and could write an instructable about it.
On the other hand, dried wood does not steam bend as well as wet wood or green wood, I assume guitar necks are made from well seasoned wood. Might be easier just to put a new neck on the guitar.
I have since found that a wallpaper steamer has higher wattage than a small electric heating pad and generates a lot more steam.
If you use one of those, you just drill a hole in the steambox the size of the hose on the steamer and run the steam right in.