View Single Post
  #20   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
benick[_2_] benick[_2_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 959
Default Lumber from home depot OK for some things?


"dpb" wrote in message ...
Aaron Fude wrote:
Hi,

I'm not an expert carpenter by any means, but sometimes it seems to me
that lumber one finds at home depot is to bowed and twisty for most
things such as building a wall. Yesterday I went to hd to by some
2x10's to replace a few joists in kitchen floor and once again, the
lumber is a little bowed a litte twisted a little chipped and a little
banged. But for joists (with plywood and hardwood to go on top), does
it really matter? Should I stick with HD or go to a lumber yard and
pay double or triple? How about lowe's?

...

What you get is what's there when you happen to be by.

Despite the other stories, it's not likely there's much (if any) real
difference between the comparable construction lumber at any of the
yards--they're all buying graded material in bulk.

The major difference is usually that at the Borg what you see is almost
always only the culls because when you get there it's already been picked
over by tens if not hundreds of others ahead of you and they don't empty
the bins except when they're actually empty.

Construction framers have the luxury of being able to select the pieces
for where it matters to a certain extent and most also cull and simply
return the truly unusable.

But, for construction, appearance isn't all that critical (once it's in
the wall or floor and covered up, what's to see, anyway?) and it's "tied
down" when installed. For wall studs it's nice if they're at least
reasonably straight so walls aren't terribly bowed, but as others have
noted, unless it is kiln dried, there's a reasonable chance it's going to
warp as it dries further, anyway, even if it's straight going home.

--

I agree totally...Both HD and the yards around here BOTH buy Canandian
crap...Unless you pick it YOURSELF you ALWAYS have culls. I usually cut them
up for cripples or use them where it doesn't matter. I ALWAYS pick the best
ones out of the pile the yard delivers to the jobsite for critical areas
like window , door openings , stairs,ect,. FIRST and set them aside under a
tarp or lumber cover....I've seen lumber curl and twist in just a few days
stored outside in the sun so keep that in mind as well.....