Length? Timber boards that are very long are hard to come by. You can buy manufactured board of great length. Manufactured board is supposed to be stronger, too.
Pressure treated timber is timber impregnated with chromated copper arsenate under pressure and vacuum cycles. These preserve the timber from various fungicides that would normally eat the timber reducing its life-span.
what kind of timber would be best suited to make a mould for use ina a vacuum former
Mined diamonds are more valuable than manufactured diamonds, as gemstones. This may not be a consideration for you, in which case, you would own a manufactured diamond.
That would be the mother board.
The term would be hyphenated machine-made, but this is rarely used. Normally the term is used is manufactured.
Manufactured boards are already recycled natural timber so its hard to recycle them after all the glue, resin and wood pulp has been added.
I would rather play life because scrabble is gay!
12x12 timber, of what wood species? And what is the moisture content of this wood? The question above cannot be answered without more information. A 12"x12"x8' piece of Balsa timber will weigh much less than a 12"x12"x8' Teak or Red Oak. In order to calculate the weight of 12x12 timber, you would need to know the specific weight of the wood, usually based on a board foot weight, then you could calculate how many board feet are in the piece of 12x12 you want to weigh. To get the board foot amount you would use this formula Thickness"*Width"*Length'/12 = Board Foot. So my piece listed above would be 96 board feet. Now that you know how much wood you want the weight of, you need to determine the moisture content, and also the wood species.
Cubic board feet is not a term used in the lumber industry, but it's obvious that a cubic foot is a cube that is one foot on an edge. A board foot, which is a common term used in the lumber industry is a piece of wood that is twelve inches wide, one inch thick and one foot long. Ten board feet would be a board one inch thick, twelve inches wide and ten feet long. (And no, a board doesn't have to be 12 inches wide. If it's 6 inches wide and 2 inches thick and one foot long, there is still one board foot of material there.) To make a cubic foot of wood, one might take one board foot of wood (12"x12"x1") and put it down, then stack another eleven pieces just like it on top the first one. That's 12 pieces of wood that are 1" thick for a total of 12" in height, and which are 12"x12" (length and width) giving us a volume of wood that is 12"x12"x12" or one cubic foot.
I would think this was rather obvious, it would be hard to operate without either of them.
looks like the road from livingston to big timber through the mountains. Cant remember the name of the road but I would rather be there than here.
The timber wolves.
Depending on the timber use, Paulownia can be cut back after anything from one year (for biomass growth) to 20 years (for large timber board). Common practice is to harvest the Paulownia timber from the age of 5-8 for high quality wood. At this age, Paulownia trees can grow to the size equivalent of a 25 year old Teak tree. For optimum timber production efficiency, under good conditions, harvest would be done at year 10.
cause the leprechauns would rather it be kept a secret. much love. broomstick#2
how tall is a full grown timber wolf 500000,000000000 hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahah
Slowly heated timber would simply dry and become classed as seasoned. If steam is used, the timber would become pliable, and could be bent - resulting in the curved handle on a walking-stick, for instance.
because it would not be true timber because nature is nature thus it helps us also to let more timber grow :]