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#1
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Is my deck made out of cedar or redwood?
How can I tell? The wood is grey (about 5 years old).
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#2
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"Oscar_Lives" wrote in message news:IhShe.83784$c24.72949@attbi_s72... How can I tell? The wood is grey (about 5 years old). Can you cut a piece someplace? That would reveal a fresh surface that would help. |
#3
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use a sanding tool or the like and smell the area sanded. If it
smells like cedar,.............well, It's cedar. If it smells like pine, then it's pine...............etc...This will work well with the cedar, but the rest of the woods I am unfamiliar with the scent , so i'd probably be just a fool for stating the above. But cut the cedar and it'll give off a very distinct cedar smell, unless it's just rotten to death. How can I tell? The wood is grey (about 5 years old). Remove "YOURPANTIES" to reply MUADIB® http://www.angelfire.com/retro/sster...IN%20PAGE.html one small step for man,..... One giant leap for attorneys. |
#4
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If it looks good, it's redwood. Otherwise it is cedar or, worse yet,
pressure treated lumber. I'm assuming the wood has a clear protective coating. If someone put a colored preservative over the wood, all bets are off. |
#5
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"Oscar_Lives" wrote in message news:IhShe.83784$c24.72949@attbi_s72... How can I tell? The wood is grey (about 5 years old). Where do you live? Redwood decks are pretty much a West Coast affair. You don't see much cedar in the East either, because of the expense. The most common to everywhere is plain old pressure treated pine. Unless you live in a bucks up community, I'd bet on the pine. |
#6
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Oscar_Lives wrote:
How can I tell? The wood is grey (about 5 years old). If you can access the underside at all try sanding a small portion of it. The upper surface will remain unmarked, and you should be able to figure out what you have. -- If you find a posting or message from myself offensive, inappropriate, or disruptive, please ignore it. If you don't know how to ignore a posting,complain to me and I will demonstrate. |
#7
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From your discription, the deck is concrete.
-- Remove the obvious to reply. Experienced and reliable Concrete Finishing and Synthetic Stucco application in the GTA. "Gort" wrote in message ... Oscar_Lives wrote: How can I tell? The wood is grey (about 5 years old). If you can access the underside at all try sanding a small portion of it. The upper surface will remain unmarked, and you should be able to figure out what you have. -- If you find a posting or message from myself offensive, inappropriate, or disruptive, please ignore it. If you don't know how to ignore a posting,complain to me and I will demonstrate. |
#8
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Sunflower wrote:
"Oscar_Lives" wrote in message news:IhShe.83784$c24.72949@attbi_s72... How can I tell? The wood is grey (about 5 years old). Where do you live? Redwood decks are pretty much a West Coast affair. You don't see much cedar in the East either, because of the expense. The most common to everywhere is plain old pressure treated pine. Unless you live in a bucks up community, I'd bet on the pine. Not generically true...many decks in TN were redwood (I'd say the majority until about 10 years ago) for almost all new construction. Granted it's now gotten expensive enough to be a custom material, granted. |
#9
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"Oscar_Lives" wrote in message news:IhShe.83784$c24.72949@attbi_s72... How can I tell? The wood is grey (about 5 years old). If those are the only 2 choices than Cedar ages light gray, redwood ages darker. |
#10
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In article , "calhoun" wrote:
"Oscar_Lives" wrote in message news:IhShe.83784$c24.72949@attbi_s72... How can I tell? The wood is grey (about 5 years old). If those are the only 2 choices than Cedar ages light gray, redwood ages darker. If you don't have anything to compare it to, though, it's kinda tough to tell that way. If you can drill a hole, or cut a bit off, in an inconspicuous place, that should be enough to identify the difference. Even old cedar will have a faint, but still noticeable, cedar smell to it when cut; likewise, pine smells like pine; but redwood doesn't smell like either one. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) Nobody ever left footprints in the sands of time by sitting on his butt. And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time? |
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