Timbers Flashcards

1
Q

Softwood examples

A
  • Redwood
  • Pine
  • Yew
  • Spruce
  • Cedar
  • Douglas fir
  • Larch
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2
Q

Softwood properties

A
  • Takes 5-10 years to mature
  • Mostly from northern hemisphere
  • Known as conifers/evergreens
  • fast growing (sustainable), can be regrown in a lifetime
  • Straight trunks
  • Careful forest management ensures worldwide demand is met
  • Pine like leaves, produces cones
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3
Q

FSC

A

Forestry Stewardship Council

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4
Q

Hardwood examples

A
  • Birch
  • Beech
  • Oak
  • Mahogany
  • Ash
  • Maple
  • Walnut
  • Balsa
  • Cherry
  • Mangrove
  • Acacia
  • Holly
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5
Q

Hardwood properties

A
  • Takes 150+ years to mature
  • Grown across the world
  • Broad-leafed, deciduous
  • More durable than soft woods
  • Variety of colour and texture (ebony-ash)
  • Slow growing
  • More expensive than soft woods
  • Tighter grain
  • Produces nuts and berries
  • Holly is an exception as it’s evergreen with broadleaves
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6
Q

Faults in wood

A
  • Grain
  • Knots (not stable, very dense)
  • Cupping (not dried properly or from heartwood)
  • Bowing (not supported correctly)
  • Twisting (not stacked correctly)
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7
Q

Biological attack

A

Insects
- woodlice, death watch beetle, woodworm
Fungi
- wet rot, stays at submerged area
- dry rot, moves up walls, not enough air

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8
Q

Conversion

A

Process of sawing logs into commercially viable timber

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9
Q

Slab sawn

A
  • Wide planks
  • Easy manufacture
  • All timber used
  • Cupping, unstable
  • Cost effective
  • Fast
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10
Q

Radial/Quarter sawn

A
  • Thiner Planks
  • More expensive
  • Very stable
  • Time consuming
  • Cutting results in a good grain pattern
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11
Q

Seasoning

A

The process of removing excess water and much of the bound moisture from the cell walls. Water reduced to 20%. Immune to rot and decay

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12
Q

Kiln seasoning

A

Put in an oven (steam). Stream cures timber, vacuum draws water out. Takes 24hrs, quick and cheap

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13
Q

Natural air seasoning

A

Roof, no walls, air can circulate. Every 25mm takes one year to season. Expensive (time and space). High quality and very stable wood.

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14
Q

Manufactured board’s examples

A
  • Chip board
  • MDF (medium density fibreboard)
  • Plywood
  • Lamin board
  • Block board
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15
Q

Lamination

A

Putting things into layers

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16
Q

Manufactured boards

A

Thermosetting plastic holds boards together (eg resin), not recyclable or sustainable, cost effective

17
Q

Plywood

A

Strong, layers at 45 degrees, odd number of layers do grain runs the same way. +5 layers it is known as multiply

18
Q

Advantages to manufactured boards

A
  • Large standard sized sheets
  • Uniform thickness
  • Stable in most atmospheric conditions
  • Grained boards have good strength to weight ratio
  • Thin sheets can be easily bent
19
Q

Disadvantages to manufactured boards

A
  • Difficult to join
  • Exposed edges often need to be hidden
  • Thin sheets become easily distorted, unless held in a frame
  • Adhesives can blunt cutting tools quickly