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Technology & Knowledge > Understanding Wood Sizes | Submit a Question & Answer |
When visiting your local home center or
woodworking supplier, you'll notice that stock comes in varying sizes.
Additionally, softwood sizes differ from hardwood sizes. While the numbers
may seem logical, they can be a bit deceiving, as you'll soon discover. Why one-inch isn't really one-inch:
Everybody has heard of a 2x4 (pronounced "two by
four"), but few people realize that the actual height and width of
a 2x4 is really somewhere close to 1 1/2" x 3 1/2" depending
on dryness of the material and milling methods. Similarly, a 1x
(pronounced "one-by") is only about 3/4" in thickness.
Wood shrinks when it is dried, so lumber mills adjust their tools
accordingly. Length of a piece of stock is not affected, so an 8' 2x4 is
usually very close or even slightly longer than 96-inches.
Softwood sizing:
Most softwoods, used in home construction and for
general purpose woodworking, come in 1x and 2x sizes. In the top half of
the chart shown, the Name columns display the "advertised
sizes" and can be compared to the typical actual sizes in the
corresponding column to the right. For instance, a 2x6 typically
measures out at 1-1/2" x 5-1/2" in actual size.
Hardwood sizing:
Hardwood sizing can be a bit more confusing, because
it often depends on whether the stock is surfaced
on one side (S1S) or on two
sides (S2S). Notice in the Hardwood Sizing section of the chart that
a one-inch piece of stock will typically measure 7/8" if it is
surfaced on one side, but 13/16" if surfaced on two (opposite)
sides.
Hardwoods rarely come in standard dimensions like
softwoods. Instead of finding a 2x6 in hardwood vareties, you'll find
that suppliers sell hardwoods in random varieties measured by the board-foot.
Additionally, hardwood may be sold in quarters. Each quarter refers to a 1/4-inch in thickness, meaning, a 5/4 board is roughly 1-1/4". If your project calls for a piece that is exactly one-inch thick, you'll want to purchase a 5/4 board and mill it down to the proper size using a surface planer. Plywood:
Plywood us available in 4'x8' sheets, but once again,
thickness sizes can be deceiving. The most common sizes of plywood are
1/2-inch and 3/4-inch, but in actuality, this corresponds to 15/32-inch
and 23/32-inch in thickness respectively.
Plywood is graded in A, B, C and D grades, depending on the sanded finish of the two sides of the sheet, A being the smoothest. A sheet is graded on both sides: for instance, a sheet of BC plywood is grade B on one side and C on the other.
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