: But a nominal 6 inch width is 5 1/2 inches, so if you rip that 12 inch board
: in half, allowing for 1/8th inch kerf, your home-ripped boards are going
: to each be 1/16th wider than boards you would buy at the store.
: So when you get common softwood lumber a board foot of 1 x 12 would actually
: measure 1 foot long by 11.25 wide by .75 thick. If you were to by nominal
: 1x2's, the loss would be greater. these only measure 1 1/2 inches wide.
: Six of these, side by side would only measure 9 inches, but that's what
: you woudl get in a board foot of 1x2s--a piece .75 thick, 12 inches long,
: and equivalent to 9 inches wide.
: Should you decide you need 1x2s and figure on ripping your own from a 1x12,
: with 5 rip cuts taking out 5/8ths inch of material, you'll be splitting
: the remaining 10 5/8-wide board into 6 pieces which are a bit over 1 3/4
: inches wide. But why do that when with 6 rip cuts, removing 3/4 inch of
: stock in those 1/8th inch kerfs, you can actually rip the remaining 10.5
: of good wood into seven, not six 1x2s.
: Yes this is confusing--and the lumberyards are usually the winners. There are
: some exceptions. I've run into some places where the employees weren't
: sure how the management set the prices, or the management had their own
: rules on figuring boardfeet. They would look at the listed price per board
: foot, and if the wood measured 3/4 inch thick they would charge you 75
: percent of the listed rate. Sometimes they would figure the actual width
: of a board, as well.
: The moral here is to ask how rates are calculated at that particular
: lumberyard before buying, or comparing their price with the competition.
: Caveat Emptor (let the buyer beware)
: In April 2003 The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) published a
: study on this (http://www.treesearch.fs.fed.us/pubs/22353) and found that
: after observing data from 14 different mills, starting in 1996: "The
: width of the dry, 4/4 thickness, red oak lumber sample was significantly
: influenced by lumber grade, lumber length, and mill. The dominant lumber
: widthclass was 5.00 to 6.75 inches (47 % of all boards). Boards in the FAS
: and FAS-1F grades were wider than those in the No. 1, No. 2A, and No. 3A
: Common grades, and these were wider than the Selects grade boards. There
: was significant variability in lumber size attributes between mills,
: supporting the contention that each mill must collect its own data on
: lumber size and quality characteristics for optimal decision making"
: The entire report is available here:
: http://www.fs.fed.us/ne/newtown_square/publications/other_publishers/OCR/ne_2003_wiedenbeck002.pdf
: Hope this helps
: PGJ
Well....depends on the yard. The good ones, also unfortionately usually the more expensive ones, tend to actually measure the wood and use that in the board/ft. calculations. Helps to carry your own tape measure and point it out to them, though this only works if they post their prices per board ft.
The smaller yards that are a little less pricy tend to price per running foot and then you're correct, they are scamming on the sizes.
Bill H.
Messages In This Thread
- Strip: Cedar thickness
Tim -- 10/24/2007, 8:56 am- history of wood thickness *LINK*
Paul G. Jacobson -- 10/27/2007, 3:25 pm- Re: history of wood thickness
Bill Hamm -- 10/28/2007, 1:46 am- Re: history of wood thickness
Paul G. Jacobson -- 10/28/2007, 7:56 am- Re: history of wood thickness
Mike Savage -- 10/28/2007, 11:14 am
- Re: history of wood thickness
- Re: history of wood thickness
- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
Bill Hamm -- 10/25/2007, 12:36 am- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
Acors -- 10/25/2007, 9:07 am- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
Bill Hamm -- 10/26/2007, 1:25 am- Wood thickness
Paul G. Jacobson -- 10/27/2007, 1:27 pm- wood thickness pt 2
Paul G. Jacobson -- 10/27/2007, 1:34 pm- Re: wood thickness pt 2
Bill Hamm -- 10/28/2007, 1:43 am
- Wood thickness Pt 1
Paul G. Jacobson -- 10/27/2007, 1:31 pm- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
TOM RAYMOND -- 10/27/2007, 12:41 pm- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
Bill Hamm -- 10/28/2007, 1:39 am
- wood thickness pt 2
- Wood thickness
- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
Kurt Maurer -- 10/24/2007, 6:58 pm- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
Ken Blanton -- 10/24/2007, 6:00 pm- Strip: Cedar thickness
Jay Babina -- 10/24/2007, 2:19 pm- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
Acors -- 10/24/2007, 1:20 pm- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
Mike Scarborough -- 10/24/2007, 9:01 am- Re: Strip: Cedar thickness
Glen Smith -- 10/24/2007, 11:08 am
- Re: history of wood thickness
- history of wood thickness *LINK*