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Wood in construction : how to avoid costly mistakes / Jim Coulson.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Coulson, Jim (James C.), author.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Building, Wooden.
- Building, Wooden--Great Britain.
- Timber.
- Timber--Great Britain.
- Wood--Preservation.
- Great Britain.
- Wood.
- Wood--Preservation--Great Britain.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (xii, 208 pages)
- Place of Publication:
- Chichester, West Sussex, UK ; Hoboken : Wiley-Blackwell, 2012.
- System Details:
- text file
- Summary:
- A British wood scientist and timber technologist with a long career in construction, Coulson offers a guide to selecting and using wood for building. There are a few simple but little known properties of wood that can make a particular piece perfect for a particular use or a source of disaster he says. His topics include wood as a material, moisture content and the drying of timber, grading for appearance, wood preservation and finishes, and a selection of hardwoods used in Britain. Annotation ©2012 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
- Contents:
- 1 Wood as a Material 1
- 1.1 Cellulose 2
- 1.2 Grain 4
- 1.3 Dimensional change in wood 8
- 1.4 Heartwood and sapwood 10
- 1.5 Natural durability 13
- 1.6 Rays 14
- 1.7 Radial and tangential directions 15
- 1.8 Permeability in timber 16
- 1.9 Chapter summary 16
- 2 More on Timber: Some Stuff About the UK Timber Trade 18
- 2.1 'Wood' or 'timber'? 18
- 2.2 Wood species and timber trading 19
- 2.3 Softwoods and hardwoods 19
- 2.4 Some more detail on cell structure 23
- 2.5 Trade names and scientific names 27
- 2.6 A cautionary tale about timber names 28
- 2.7 Growth rings 31
- 2.8 Earlywood and latewood 32
- 2.9 Rate of growth in softwoods 33
- 2.10 Rate of growth in hardwoods 34
- 2.11 Chapter summary 37
- 3 Water in Wood: Moisture Content and the Drying of Timber 39
- 3.1 The definition of moisture content 39
- 3.2 Moisture meters 40
- 3.3 'Wet' or 'dry'? In-service moisture contents and 'EMC' 43
- 3.4 EMC 44
- 3.5 Specification of desired moisture content 44
- 3.6 Fibre saturation point 46
- 3.7 Shrinkage 47
- 3.8 Movement 48
- 3.9 Kiln drying 49
- 3.10 Air drying 53
- 3.11 Timescales for drying timber 54
- 3.12 Chapter summary 55
- 4 Specifying Timber - for Indoor or Outdoor Uses 57
- 4.1 British and European standards 57
- 4.2 Durability and treatability of different wood species 58
- 4.3 Use classes 59
- 4.4 Examples of timbers employed in different use classes 60
- 4.5 Hazard and risk - and their relative importance 60
- 4.6 Use Class 1 - examples 61
- 4.7 Use Class 2 - examples 64
- 4.8 Use Class 3 - examples 66
- 4.9 Use Class 4 - examples 70
- 4.10 Use Class 5 - examples 76
- 4.11 Chapter summary 78
- 5 The Quality of Timber: Grading for Appearance 79
- 5.1 The need for grading 80
- 5.2 'Quality' or 'grade'? 81
- 5.3 Quality 82
- 5.4 Grade 82
- 5.5 The different types of grading 83
- 5.6 Appearance grading 83
- 5.7 Appearance grading: based on defects 83
- 5.8 Scandinavian grades 87
- 5.9 Unsorted, fifths and sixths 88
- 5.10 Russian softwood qualities 89
- 5.11 European appearance grading 90
- 5.12 North American softwood appearance grades 90
- 5.13 Clears, merchantable and commons 92
- 5.14 A comparison of Scandinavian grades and North American grades 93
- 5.15 Appearance grading: based on 'cuttings' 93
- 5.16 The NHLA grades 94
- 5.17 FAS, selects and commons 96
- 5.18 Selects 96
- 5.19 'F1F' 97
- 5.20 Prime and Comsel grades 97
- 5.21 Malaysian grades 98
- 5.22 Prime, select and standard 98
- 5.23 'PHND', 'BHND' or 'sound' 99
- 5.24 Rules are made to be bent! (within reason) 99
- 5.25 Shipper's usual 99
- 5.26 BS EN 942: the quality of timber in joinery 100
- 5.27 J classes 100
- 5.28 'Exposed face' 101
- 5.29 Chapter summary 102
- 6 Strength Grading and Strength Classes of Timber 104
- 6.1 Appearance versus strength 106
- 6.2 Visual strength grades 107
- 6.3 GS and SS strength grades 107
- 6.4 Strength classes for softwoods 108
- 6.5 BS EN 1912 108
- 6.6 SC3, SC4: C16 and C24 109
- 6.7 Machine grading 110
- 6.8 Other strength grades: Europe and North America 112
- 6.9 Select structural, No. 1 and No. 2 structural and stud grades 112
- 6.10 TR26 113
- 6.11 Specifying the strength class or the wood species: some things to think about 114
- 6.12 Hardwood strength grades 115
- 6.13 Tropical hardwoods 116
- 6.14 Temperate hardwoods 116
- 6.15 The 'Size effect' 117
- 6.16 Hardwood strength classes 118
- 6.17 The marking of strength graded timber 119
- 6.18 Chapter summary 120
- 7 Wood Preservatives and Wood Finishes 122
- 7.1 Treat the timber last! 122
- 7.2 Wood preservative types 123
- 7.3 'Old' and 'new' types of treatments 124
- 7.4 The basic methods of timber treatment 124
- 7.5 Low pressure treatment 125
- 7.6 High pressure treatment 126
- 7.7 Preservative chemicals 126
- 7.8 CCA preservatives 126
- 7.9 The 'environmentally-friendly' preservatives 127
- 7.10 'Tanalised' timber 128
- 7.11 Organic compounds 128
- 7.12 'Treated' timber 129
- 7.13 'Wood finishes' 129
- 7.14 Wood in exterior uses 130
- 7.15 Exterior finishes 131
- 7.16 Varnish - and paint 131
- 7.17 'Microporous' exterior stains and paints 133
- 7.18 Non-film-forming finishes 133
- 7.19 Exterior paints 134
- 7.20 The durability of exterior finishes 135
- 7.21 The effects of lighter or darker colours 136
- 7.22 Chapter summary 137
- 8 Principal Softwoods Used in the UK 139
- 8.1 European redwood (Pinus sylvestris) 139
- 8.2 European whitewood (mostly Picea abies) 141
- 8.3 Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis) 142
- 8.4 Western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla) 142
- 8.5 'Douglas fir' (Pseudotsuga menziesii) 143
- 8.6 Larch (mainly Larix decidua and L. kaempferi/L. leptolepis) 145
- 8.7 'Western red cedar' (Thuja plicata) 145
- 8.8 Southern pine (Pinus spp - principally Pinus elliottii and P. palustris) 146
- 8.9 Yellow pine (Pinus strobus) 147
- 8.10 'Parana pine' (Araucaria angustifolia) 147
- 8.11 Species groups 148
- 8.12 Spruce-pine-fir 148
- 8.13 Hem-fir 149
- 8.14 Douglas fir-larch 149
- 9 A Selection of Hardwoods Used in the UK 150
- 9.1 Ash, American (Fraxinus spp) 151
- 9.2 Ash, European (Fraxinus excelsior) 152
- 9.3 Beech, European (Fagus sylvatka) 152
- 9.4 Birch, European (mainly Betula pubescens) 153
- 9.5 Cherry, American (Primus serotitta) 153
- 9.6 Chestnut, Sweet (Castanea sativa) 153
- 9.7 Ekki (Lophira alata) 154
- 9.8 Greenheart (Ocotea rodiaei) 154
- 9.9 Idigbo (Terminalia ivorensis) 155
- 9.10 Iroko (Milicia excelsa) 155
- 9.11 Keruing (Dipterocarpus spp.) 156
- 9.12 Mahogany, African (Kltaya ivorensis and K. anthotheca) 156
- 9.13 Mahogany, American (Swietenia macrophylla) 156
- 9.14 Maple (Acer saccharum) 157
- 9.15 Meranti (Shorea spp.) 157
- 9.16 Oak, American red (principally Quercus rubra and Q. falcata) 158
- 9.17 Oak, American white (principally Quercus alba, Q. prinus, Q. lyrata and Q. michauxii) 158
- 9.18 Oak, European (mainly Quercus robur) 158
- 9.19 Obeche (Triplochiton scleroxylon) 159
- 9.20 Opepe (Nauclea diderrichii) 160
- 9.21 Sapele (Entandrophragma cylindricum) 160
- 9.22 Tatajuba (Bagassa guianensis) 161
- 9.23 Teak (Tectona grandis) 161
- 9.24 Utile (Entandrophragma utile) 161
- 9.25 Walnut, American (Juglans nigra) 162
- 9.26 Walnut, European (Juglans regia) 162
- 9.27 Whitewood, American, or Tulipwood (Liriodendron tulipifera) 163
- 10 Wood-based Sheet Materials 164
- 10.1 Plywood 164
- 10.2 The two fundamental properties of plywood 165
- 10.3 Basic types of plywood 166
- 10.4 Conifer plywoods 166
- 10.5 Temperate hardwood plywoods 168
- 10.6 Tropical hardwood plywoods 168
- 10.7 Plywood glue bond and 'WBP' 169
- 10.8 Exterior 170
- 10.9 Adhesives used in plywood 171
- 10.10 BS 1088 marine plywood 172
- 10.11 Plywood face quality 172
- 10.12 Appearance grading of face veneers 173
- 10.13 Conifer plywood appearance grades 173
- 10.14 Temperate hardwood plywood appearance grades 175
- 10.15 Tropical hardwood plywood appearance grades 175
- 10.16 Particleboards and wood chipboard 177
- 10.17 Flaxboard and bagasse board 178
- 10.18 OSB 178
- 10.19 Fibreboards 181
- 10.20 Hardboard, medium board and soffboard 181
- 10.21 MDF 183
- 10.22 Chapter summary 185.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Electronic reproduction. Palo Alto, Calif. : ebrary, 2012. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries.
- OCLC:
- 778434083
- Access Restriction:
- Restricted for use by site license.
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