Title: Wood
1Wood
2Building Materials-Lumber
- Definitions
- Lumber Wooden members that measure from 1 to 6
inches thick, 2 to 12 inches wide and 6 to 16
feet long. - Boards Wooden members less than 1 inch thick.
- Timbers Wooden members greater than 6 inches
thick.
- Finished lumber and boards are sized by nominal
sizes. - The actual size is less than the named size.
- Rough sawn lumber and boards will be closer to
actual size, but the surfaces will be irregular.
3Wood Terminology
4Wood terms
- Hard wood
- Soft wood
- Heart wood
- Sap wood
- Growth rings
- Plain (flat) sawn
- Quarter sawn
- Board wood
- Nominal sizing
5Wood Terminology Hard woodSoft woods
- All native species of trees are divided into two
classes.
- Hard wood have broad leaves and are deciduous
- Soft woods are conifers
6Wood Terminology--cont. Heartwood and sapwood
- Sapwood is the outer portion that conducts sap
and has the living cells. - The thickness will vary, but usually from 1-1/2
to 2 inches on a mature tree. - Heartwood is the inactive cells in the inner
portion. - Mineral deposits may cause darker color.
- Deposits make wood more durable.
Sap wood
Bark
Heart wood
7Wood Terminology--cont. Growth rings
Summerwood
- Because the rate a tree grows change with the
seasons, a cross section will show distinctive
rings. - Springwood
- Inner part of the growth ring
- Usually larger cavities and thin walls
- Summerwood
- Outer part of growth ring
- Smaller cells and thicker walls.
- A tree grows one springwood and one summerwood
ring each year. - Used to age trees
Springwood
8Wood Terminology--cont. Sawing Direction
- Plain sawn (Flat sawn)
- Board is sawed parallel to growth rings
- Most common boards.
- Quarter sawn
- Log is first quartered
- Boards are cut perpendicular to the grain.
- Usually must be special ordered.
Were have you seen quarter sawn boards used?
9Wood Terminology--cont. Nominal sizing
- Dimensioned finished lumber is sized using what
is called an nominal sizing. - The nominal size is not the finished size of the
lumberit is the rough cut size. - The finished size, what you buy, is always less
than the rough cut size.
10Cut Size Actual Size
11Softwood Construction Lumber Standard Dimensions
12Wood Terminology--Board Foot
- In a store lumber, boards and timbers are usually
sold as /piece, but the listed price is based on
a /bf. - Large volumes of lumber can also be purchased on
a /bf bases. - Board foot is a volume measurement.
- Board foot is calculated using the nominal size,
not the actual size.
13Wood Terminology--cont.Board Foot
- A board foot is a volume of lumber for a board
that is one (1) inch thick, twelve (12) inches
wide and twelve (12) inches long. - One board foot 144 in3
- Nominal sizes are used to calculate board feet
when calculating costs. - Actual sizes are used when calculating loads or
strength.
Equations
14Wood Terminology--cont.Board Foot Example
- Determine the number of board feet for the
following list of dimensioned lumber. - 2 - 2 x 4 x 12
- 3 - 1 x 4 x 10
- 2 - 4 x 4 x 8
15Eight (8) Characteristics of wood
- Defects
- Grain orientation
- Stiffness
- Ease of working
- Paint holding ability
- Nail holding power
- Decay resistance
- Bending strength
16Wood Terminology--contDefects
Wane (Bark)
Knot
Shake
Split
Cross grain crack
Sloping grain
17Wood Terminology--contDefects
18Wood Characteristics-cont.
- Ease of working
- Tree species vary on workability and
machineability. - Paint holding ability
- Paint holds better on edge grain that on flat
train - Knots do not hold paint well
- The bark side of a flat sawed board will usually
hold paint better than the inner side. - Nail holding power
- Related to density and its splitting tendencies
- Denser and harder woods hold better if they do
not split. - Decay resistance
- Wood that is continuously dry or continuously wet
does not decay. - Ideal decay conditions are 21-24 moisture
- The heartwood of some species is very decay
resistant.
19Wood Characteristics-cont. Bending strength
- Bending strength is determined by 6
characteristics. - Number of defects
- Size of defects
- Type of defects
- Species
- Density and moisture content
- Grain orientation
20Grain Orientation
Wood is stronger when forces are applied parallel
to the grain than when force is applied
perpendicular to the grain.
21Wood Characteristics-cont Stiffness
- Stiffness is a measure of the amount of
deflection that occurs when a load is applied. - Determined by the cross section shape of the
member and the load. - Amount of acceptable deflection is different for
each building member.
22Summary Tables of Characteristics.
23Wood CharacteristicsSoft Woods
Structures and Environment Hand Book, MWPS-1
24Wood CharacteristicsHard Woods
Structures and Environment Hand Book, MWPS-1
25Selecting Wood For Common Home and Farm Use
(Fact Sheet F903)
http//ohioline.osu.edu/for-fact/pdf/0009.pdf
26Selecting Wood For Common Home and Farm
Use--cont. (Fact Sheet F903)
27Selecting Wood For Common Home and Farm
Use--cont. (Fact Sheet F903)
28Selecting Wood For Common Home and Farm
Use--cont. (Fact Sheet F903)
29Pressure Treated Wood
- Pressure treating is a process that forces a
chemical preservative deep into the wood. - Chemicals
- Until 2003, the preservative most commonly used
in residential pressure-treated lumber was
chromated copper arsenate (CCA). - Now limited to commercial uses.
- Recommended chemicals for residential use
- Amine copper quat (ACQ)
- Copper azone (CA)
30Questions