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New You want a thickness planer for that last bit
Besides having the finished board come out without cutting tracks all over it, it'll go a lot faster.
New Planing, sanding, do it again
Take a slice. Keep it in the humidity temperature controlled environment for whatever amount of time it takes for the wood to hit the correct humidity and then do it again. At that points start putting in bow ties or other methods for filling in the imperfections.

Raw is still raw wood and I'm not expecting to just be able to use it, but it's a huge difference from having zero wood and hoping you can afford the wood at the store and having a shitload of wood right next to you and knowing that if I go through certain steps it becomes usable.

I have a 10x14 20-year-old wooden shed that I can just lay boards out on the floor (assuming flatness, if not I'll put it on a table) and roll this thing over them them them without caring about the dust.

I already have the correct large milling flattening bit. I understand that I'll chew through this and have to get multiples soon enough. I just stopped by a used lot. It's not a used store, it's a used lot with dozens of tents filled with stuff.

https://www.aroundagainstore.org/

One of the tents filled with tools and routers are $15 a piece. I saw at least a dozen routers to pick from. I took a $45 band saw instead this time.
     Flattening Sled - (crazy) - (4)
         You want a thickness planer for that last bit - (scoenye) - (1)
             Planing, sanding, do it again - (crazy)
         That thing looks really, really dangerous. - (Another Scott) - (1)
             How is that different from every other tool I use? - (crazy)

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