Last Fearner
2nd Black Belt
I've never attended a board breaking competition - has anyone ever read the fine print in the enrollment packet? or the rules?
I have read many tournament rules, and written quite a few. The only stipulation that I have ever seen that affects breaking materials is when the tournament host requires the boards to be purchased at the tournament site. Hopefully, the tournament organizers have the common sense to buy the wood well in advance, cut it to length, and let the sap dry out naturally!
Like Kacey, I have been involved with tournaments that do provide the boards to attempt to prevent fixing of breaking materials, but it does not always succeed. As I said, a person who is dishonest is going to attempt to cheat one way or another (even switching tournament boards with boards brought at the last minute, or scoring them just before breaking). Inspection is the only way to ensure a fair break.
Do contests generally have restrictions against over-dried wood, sir?
Basically, if a tournament permits boards to be brought, then the only rules are that they must not be "tampered with" in order to give an unfair advantage, and this is something that is left to the inspection by the judges in the ring. Since drying the wood naturally is a standard practice (it dries some in shipment from the mill to the Lumber Yard, and while waiting at the Lumber Yard to be bought) there are no rules against drying wood. No one knows how long a plank has been drying since the time it was cut from the tree, and Lumber Yards often have a mixture of new shipments with wood that has been there a while.
Rules simply can not arbitrate drying time or methods, but judges can check to see if the wood is too easy to break. If the tournament is providing the boards, then there is no need for a rule because everyone is using boards of similar drying time (hopefully), but you still have to check the boards in the ring for natural imperfections, and impromptu fixing.
I can understand wood having hairline cracks is indicative of it being dried. However, is that necessarily indicative of the board being baked per se? It seems that unfinished wood could conceivably get as dry as that simply by sitting in dry air for too long before competition.
You are right, Carol. A plank of wood (like pine) can have splits and hairline cracks just because of the way the tree grew, and the plank was taken from a weak spot. Also, natural drying of wood can cause hairline cracks as the wood dries out, expands and contracts from heat and cold of day and night or the seasons. Between Jr. High and High School, I spent six years in woodworking and cabinet making classes (made a nice grandmother clock). We always have to lookout for these natural splits in the wood.
Also, I have changed boards out on children who selected wood with a huge knot in the middle. They would likely break their hand or injure their foot if they attempted to break such a board, but they or their parents didn't know this, and their instructor apparently didn't check it. I've also seen knots, and sections of wood go flying and hit board-holders or someone clear across the room.
I *do* believe it is *generally* looked upon as "cheating."
"Cheating" requires first that a rule to be written and enforced upon all of the contestants at a given event, and then to have one or more individuals violate that rule in order to gain an unfair advantage. A tournament in which everyone is allowed to bring their own boards, and allows any method of drying, then drying or baking can not be rightfully called "cheating." Absent of a rule, you can not have a violation of that rule. The practice of drying wood, in and of itself, is not "cheating." Only using dried wood, or baked wood at a tournament that forbids it would be cheating against those specific rules!