UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,214
Default two timber questions

Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)

Another timber question: the treated timber had that characteristic
green tint to it, yet it was covered in patches of grey mould. Surely
that's exactly what the treatment is supposed to prevent? What's going
on there?

TIA
  #2   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 39,563
Default two timber questions

Fred wrote:
Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)

Dunno. My BM 's rough sawn 2x4 is 50mm x 100mm within tolerance..


Another timber question: the treated timber had that characteristic
green tint to it, yet it was covered in patches of grey mould. Surely
that's exactly what the treatment is supposed to prevent? What's going
on there?

the grey is not mould.


TIA

  #3   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5,937
Default two timber questions

On 01/02/2012 18:15, Fred wrote:
Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)

Another timber question: the treated timber had that characteristic
green tint to it, yet it was covered in patches of grey mould. Surely
that's exactly what the treatment is supposed to prevent? What's going
on there?

TIA


If it's construction grade material it doesn't get planed, but is sawn
to a good enough finish for carcassing etc. Spruce blunts planers like
crazy IIRC.
Softwood can suffer from blue stain, which goes right through the
timber, and is a fungal infection
  #4   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 121
Default two timber questions

On Feb 1, 6:15*pm, Fred wrote:
Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)

Another timber question: the treated timber had that characteristic
green tint to it, yet it was covered in patches of grey mould. Surely
that's exactly what the treatment is supposed to prevent? What's going
on there?

TIA


I think it is just the saw blade width. Assuming a 3mm saw blade,
cutting 50mm of material from a larger piece gives you a 47mm finished
size. The advantage of doing it that way rather than having the
finished sizes as multiples of an inch is that for instance a 12 inch
piece of timber can be cut into 6 x 2 inch pieces, 4 x 3inch pieces, 2
x 6 inch pieces etc. To work to finished sizes of inch multiples, 6 x
2inch (50mm) pieces would need 315mm of timber, whereas 2 x 6inch
(150mm) would need 303mm.

A
  #5   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 39,563
Default two timber questions

stuart noble wrote:
On 01/02/2012 18:15, Fred wrote:
Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)

Another timber question: the treated timber had that characteristic
green tint to it, yet it was covered in patches of grey mould. Surely
that's exactly what the treatment is supposed to prevent? What's going
on there?

TIA


If it's construction grade material it doesn't get planed, but is sawn
to a good enough finish for carcassing etc. Spruce blunts planers like
crazy IIRC.
Softwood can suffer from blue stain, which goes right through the
timber, and is a fungal infection


that aint it. The greenish tint is copper salts and IIRC so is the grey
- just different copper salts.


Its all changed a bit since people got iffy about arsenic in their decking.


  #6   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,093
Default two timber questions

On 01/02/2012 18:15, Fred wrote:
Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)

Another timber question: the treated timber had that characteristic
green tint to it, yet it was covered in patches of grey mould. Surely
that's exactly what the treatment is supposed to prevent? What's going
on there?


Its not mould its excess chemical treatment, most common near knots -
which can't absorb it.

--
Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk
  #7   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,379
Default two timber questions

On Feb 1, 6:15*pm, Fred wrote:
Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)

Another timber question: the treated timber had that characteristic
green tint to it, yet it was covered in patches of grey mould. Surely
that's exactly what the treatment is supposed to prevent? What's going
on there?

TIA


It's the saw kerf. Think huge sawmill type operations.
  #8   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,558
Default two timber questions

On 01/02/2012 18:15, Fred wrote:
Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)


They are old imperial sizes simply converted to metric:
22mm = 7/8 inch, which would plane down to 3/4 inch.
47mm = 1 7/8 inch, which would plane down to 1 3/4 inch.

Colin Bignell

  #9   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,703
Default two timber questions

In article , The Medway Handyman
writes
On 01/02/2012 18:15, Fred wrote:
Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)

Another timber question: the treated timber had that characteristic
green tint to it, yet it was covered in patches of grey mould. Surely
that's exactly what the treatment is supposed to prevent? What's going
on there?


Its not mould its excess chemical treatment, most common near knots -
which can't absorb it.

Although I have seen near rotten and well mildewed tiling battens on
sale at B&Q where they had been stored in an exposed location. Possibly
the worst supplier of treated timber on a planetary scale and of course
the didn't give a f'ck.

If the stuff at Wickes is actually wet I would pass it by just in case.
--
fred
it's a ba-na-na . . . .
  #10   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 91
Default two timber questions

On 01/02/2012 6:15 PM, Fred wrote:
Hi,

Whilst browsing in Wickes, it occurred to me that the rough sawn
timber sizes were 22mm, 47mm, etc. I can understand that planing will
shave a few millimetres off the wood but why is rough sawn sold in
these strange sizes? Why isn't it 25mm or 50mm, multiples of inches
rather than just under? (I suppose I should say before someone else
does, that I do realise an inch is not exactly 25mm)

Another timber question: the treated timber had that characteristic
green tint to it, yet it was covered in patches of grey mould. Surely
that's exactly what the treatment is supposed to prevent? What's going
on there?



OK a number of points here ..

On softwood the so called standard 4 x 2 sizes etc., these refer to
sawn timber size at a stated moisture content.

These were metricated ( as UK has to do what France tells it ) and the
standard sizes for thickness are
16, 19, 22, 25, 32, 38, 47, 50, 63, 75, 100, 150, 250 and 300mm

The standard widths a
75, 100, 115, 125, 138, 150, 175, 200, 225, 250, 275, 300mm

Not all thickness are in all widths ... but that is the standard range.

The BS standard for this requires these sizes to met -1mm to +3mm up
to 100mm size -2mm to +4mm above 100mm

So for a 4" x 2" your timber can be in range 99-103 x 49-53 mm


However it could be sold outside of these sizes as long as it does not
claim it meets BS EN 1313-1



If you buy is PSE (planed on 2 face) there is further loss in size ...
the example of 4" x 2" now becomes 47 x 97 and with allowable
deviation can be 96-100 x 46-50
Most wood shops would be aiming for the minimum end of finished sizes to
maximize their output. (there is also Class 2 which has tighter tolerance)

PAR would lose even more as it is planed all all 4 faces.


There other type of timber (I built my house out of it) you may come
across ... certainly becoming popular in the sheds,
CLS (Canadian Lumbar Standard)
This has rounded arrises (long edges) and is much easier to handle than
rough sawn ... having all 4 faces machined.
It is typically much consistent in size.

Typical sizes found in UK are
38 x 63 and 38 x 89

Notionally the 3x2 and 4x2 formats, and used where those would have
been used.
Extensively used in Timber frame construction as it is all much more
consistent in size.


As to the part of your question relating to Green tint ..........
This will only be there if the timber is pressure treated .. typically
Tantalised treatment.

BTW - once you cut it, any exposed timber has to be treated to maintain
it's qualities.



It is difficult to comment on the grey mould you mention without seeing
it, this could be standard oxidising of softwood, which turns surface
light grey.



Rick














  #11   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,214
Default two timber questions

On Wed, 01 Feb 2012 19:23:34 +0000, The Natural Philosopher
wrote:

that aint it. The greenish tint is copper salts and IIRC so is the grey
- just different copper salts.


This wasn't a grey tint, it was circular patches of grey that looked
like mould on old bread and which wiped away. It wasn't all over, just
discrete patches and it was only on some, not all of the timber. I
could be wrong, perhaps it was a salt, but I took great care to pick
the ones without it, just in case. It just seemed strange this was on
treated timber.
  #12   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,214
Default two timber questions

On Wed, 1 Feb 2012 11:20:42 -0800 (PST), andrew
wrote:

I think it is just the saw blade width. Assuming a 3mm saw blade,
cutting 50mm of material from a larger piece gives you a 47mm finished
size. The advantage of doing it that way rather than having the
finished sizes as multiples of an inch is that for instance a 12 inch
piece of timber can be cut into 6 x 2 inch pieces, 4 x 3inch pieces, 2
x 6 inch pieces etc. To work to finished sizes of inch multiples, 6 x
2inch (50mm) pieces would need 315mm of timber, whereas 2 x 6inch
(150mm) would need 303mm.


Thanks. I did wonder if it was the width of the blade (kerf?) but I
couldn't see why they didn't compensate for a 3mm loss by cutting,
say, 53mm wide. However your answer explains that: money! By cutting
47mm, they get more from the original piece of wood. I suppose that
3mm is neither here nor there when constructing say a stud wall.
  #13   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,214
Default two timber questions

On Wed, 01 Feb 2012 20:07:18 +0000, The Medway Handyman
wrote:


Its not mould its excess chemical treatment, most common near knots -
which can't absorb it.


I don't remember it being near knots. Some of the wood was bundles in
packs, and the grey deposits only seemed to be on the exposed faces of
the pack (I opened the packs to look for good stuff).
  #14   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,214
Default two timber questions

On Thu, 2 Feb 2012 12:18:07 +0000, fred wrote:

If the stuff at Wickes is actually wet I would pass it by just in case.


Some was damp, and like you said, I left it well alone.
  #15   Report Post  
Posted to uk.d-i-y
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,214
Default two timber questions

Thanks for a detailed reply.
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
NW Timber MikeWhy Woodworking 0 October 21st 08 08:14 AM
Getting An Enclosed Trailer...Questions, Questions, Questions Too_Many_Tools Metalworking 30 December 30th 07 06:19 PM
Feel like an idiot buying Timber at timber yards [email protected] UK diy 30 October 12th 07 10:15 AM
After the Deletion of Google Answers U Got Questions Fills the Gap Answering and Asking the Tough Questions [email protected] UK diy 0 May 7th 07 06:40 PM
After the Deletion of Google Answers U Got Questions Fills the Gap Answering and Asking the Tough Questions Linux Flash Drives Home Repair 0 May 7th 07 06:38 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:17 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"