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Taxonomy of Wood Products Solid Wood Products

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Presentation on theme: "Taxonomy of Wood Products Solid Wood Products"— Presentation transcript:

1 Taxonomy of Wood Products Solid Wood Products

2 Wood Products Taxonomy
Solid Wood Softwood Lumber Boards Dimension Lumber Timber Machine Stress Rated Glued Wood Finger Joined Edge Glued Treated Hardwood Composites Panels Particleboard Medium Density Fibreboard Plywood Oriented Strandboard Engineered Lumber Composites Glue Laminated Timber Laminated Veneer Lumber Oriented Strand Lumber Wood Products Taxonomy Engineered Wood Products I - Beams Cross Laminated Timber

3 Wood Products Taxonomy
Solid Wood Softwood Lumber Boards Dimension Lumber Timber Machine Stress Rated Glued Wood Finger Joined Edge Glued Treated Hardwood Composites Panels Particleboard Medium Density Fibreboard Plywood Oriented Strandboard Engineered Lumber Composites Glue Laminated Timber Laminated Veneer Lumber Oriented Strand Lumber Wood Products Taxonomy Engineered Wood Products I - Beams Cross Laminated Timber

4 Dimension Lumber  “2 by 4”, “2 by 6”, “2 by 8” construction lumber
 Majority of lumber produced in North America  Production grew approx. 1.4% p.a. from Bulk commodity product with little specialization Used mainly in residential construction

5 Dimension Lumber

6 Dimension lumber - sizes
4.0” 3.7” 3.5” 2.0” 1.7” 1.5” Rough sawn After drying After planing (“nominal” size) (actual size) “Two by four”

7 Dimension Lumber - sizes
Thickness – increments of 2 inches Width – increments of 2 inches Length – increments of 2 feet Softwood lumber pricing (US$/MBF) Product Length (ft) 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 2 x 4 215 245 240 270 260 2 x 6 235 265 2 x 8 220 255 275 290 2 x 10 195 200 300 315 Premiums for larger cross-section dimensions and lengths.

8 Dimension Lumber Majority of production sold in US
SPF species group (Spruce-Pine-Fir)

9 Typical Canadian residential construction

10

11 Softwood Boards  Non-structural, finished product
BC Wood Specialties  Non-structural, finished product 1” thick material, 2” width increments, 2’ length increments  Markets are: export, industrial, home centres

12 Softwood boards Canadian softwood board species Wall panelling

13 Softwood boards Furniture Decorative panelling

14 Timber  Minimum dimensions 5.5” High value product
Majority goes to export markets  Production is decreasing

15 Timber Post and beam construction
Architectural value as well as structural role Higher value product than smaller dimensions ($/m3)

16 Timber http://www.flickr.com/photos/monahan/3083747492/
Danzaland, Flickr 100_9859, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

17 Timber

18 Timber Cut from large diameter, old-growth logs
Emphasis is on quality rather than speed of production

19 Solid softwood lumber – species
Boards Dimension lumber Timber Spruce SPF Douglas-fir Douglas-fir Douglas-fir Cedars Pines Hemlock Hemlock Cedars

20 Machine Stress Rated Lumber
Lumber is graded by machine rather than manually Uses non-destructive measurement of stiffness to predict strength of lumber pieces  Structural end-uses  Value-added lumber product  Trusses are large market

21 Bending test Load Deflection Maximum load Modulus of Rupture
MOR “strength” Load Linear portion of curve Modulus of Elasticity MOE “stiffness” Deflection

22 MOE – MOR relationship MOR “strength” MOE “stiffness” MOR predicted x
MOE measured MOE “stiffness”

23 Machine Stress Rated Lumber
Sensor Rollers Load cell Lumber

24 Machine Stress Rated Lumber
mill designation grading agency species group A.F.P.A S-P-F MACHINE RATED S-DRY 1800f 1.6E moisture content when surfaced Grade: modulus of elasticity (x106 psi) Grade: bending strength (psi, allowable stress) (Alberta Forest Products Association)

25 MSR lumber in roof trusses

26

27 Common truss configurations

28 Softwood lumber prices
Prices in $US per thousand board feet (Mfbm) (2x4, random lengths) SPF, 2400f $ 450 SPF, 2100f $ 435 SPF, 1800f $ 425 SPF, 1650f $ 405 D-fir, #2 and better $ 420 SPF, #2 and better $ 372

29 Wood Products Taxonomy
Solid Wood Softwood Lumber Boards Dimension Lumber Timber Machine Stress Rated Glued Wood Finger Joined Edge Glued Treated Hardwood Composites Panels Particleboard Medium Density Fibreboard Plywood Oriented Strandboard Engineered Lumber Composites Glue Laminated Timber Laminated Veneer Lumber Oriented Strand Lumber Wood Products Taxonomy Engineered Wood Products I - Beams Cross Laminated Timber

30 Short lengths Longer lengths
e.g. dimension lumber trim ends

31 Removal of defects defect, e.g. knots Butt joint (end grain)

32 Finger Jointed Lumber Longer lengths produced from shorter stock
Allow defects to be reduced End-to-end joints via side-grain gluing

33 Finger Jointed Lumber BC Wood Specialties  Structural or non-structural joints can be made Longer fingers → greater strengths Increased dimensional stability in resulting piece  Utilized in lumber, glulam, I-beams

34 Finger joints Narrower edge Wider face

35 Dimensional stability of finger joined lumber
Warping tendency of any one piece is randomized in its location in finger-joined lumber and resulting piece is more dimensionally stable.

36 Finger joined stud wall of garage

37 Edge-glued Panels  Edge-lamination of wood
 Greater widths from narrow material  Dimensionally stable-panel produced  Industrial and finished retail products

38 Wood dryng defects Tangential shrinkage > Radial shrinkage
Natural tendency to “cup” Cupping is greater in wider pieces of wood

39 Dimensional stability of edge-glued panels
Randomization of end grain patterns Less likely to cup

40 Edge-glued panels

41 Wood Products Taxonomy
Solid Wood Softwood Lumber Boards Dimension Lumber Timber Machine Stress Rated Glued Wood Finger Joined Edge Glued Treated Hardwood Composites Panels Particleboard Medium Density Fibreboard Plywood Oriented Strandboard Engineered Lumber Composites Glue Laminated Timber Laminated Veneer Lumber Oriented Strand Lumber Wood Products Taxonomy Engineered Wood Products I - Beams Cross Laminated Timber

42 Treated Wood Preserves the wood against fungal degradation
For wood used in external conditions Effectively poisons the wood Chemical agent is either water-borne or oil-borne Usually introduced into wood using pressure treatment

43 Treated Wood Examples of preservatives
Creosote Pentachlorophenol (PCP) Chromated copper arsenate (CCA) Ammoniacal copper quaternary (ACQ)

44 Treated Wood Pressure treatment vessels

45 Treated Wood Examples of preservative use
Creosote Pentachlorophenol (PCP)

46 Treated Wood Examples of preservative use
CCA ACQ

47 Pressure-treated Wood
Non-incised lumber Incised lumber The retention of wood preservatives in wood species which do not readily abosrb the preservative chemical can be enhanced by incising the wood.

48 Wood Products Taxonomy
Solid Wood Softwood Lumber Boards Dimension Lumber Timber Machine Stress Rated Glued Wood Finger Joined Edge Glued Treated Hardwood Composites Panels Particleboard Medium Density Fibreboard Plywood Oriented Strandboard Engineered Lumber Composites Glue Laminated Timber Laminated Veneer Lumber Oriented Strand Lumber Wood Products Taxonomy Engineered Wood Products I - Beams Cross Laminated Timber

49 Hardwood Lumber Visual appearance of lumber is key
Used for decorative and architectural purposes rather than structural products Flooring, trim & molding, joinery, cabinets, furniture

50 Hardwood Lumber

51 Hardwood Lumber Grading system based on cutting high quality boards from rough lumber. Thickness – usually 1 inch (but also other thicknesses) Width – random widths Length – increments of 1 foot

52 Lumber Grading Softwood vs. Harwoods

53 Lumber Grading - softwoods
Softwood grading considers that the piece of lumber will be used as it stands and will not undergo subsequent reprocessing. Therefore the greatest defect in the piece decides the grade of that piece of lumber.

54 Lumber Grading - harwoods
Hardwood boards are graded on the amount of clear (defect-free) wood that can be obtained after the removal of defects. The boards are either “ripped” along the grain, or “chopped” across the grain to produce smaller, clear pieces are called “cuttings”. Cuttings are then used in the production of other items such as edge-glued panels or furniture.

55 Solid softwood lumber Dimension Lumber Timber Boards
Machine Stress Rated Lumber

56 Other solid lumber products
Edge-glued Panels Finger Jointed lumber Treated Wood Hardwood


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