Chapter 10 Manufactured Boards
Chapter 10 Manufactured Boards
Chapter 10 Manufactured Boards
Plywood
Plywood is made with layers of wood called veneers, arranged with the grain going in
both directions which makes it a very strong board.
The veneers are glued together like a sandwich to make the sheet of material.
Veneers are sheets of wood cut from the surface of a plank or by rotary cutting from a
log.
In plywood, each layer is positioned so that the grain is at right angles (90 0) to the
layer below.
There are always an odd number of plies in plywood 3,5,7,etc, so that the 2 outside
plies are facing the same direction.
Disadvantages
Edges need to be covered with a decorative strip
The surface veneers are usually plain
Cannot easily screw or nail into the edge of plywood as it would split.
How Plywood is made
Chipboard
Chipboard is made by taking woodchips of different grades and gluing them together
with a synthetic resin.
The mixture is pressed together or formed into sheets of regular thickness.
They are then sanded down to give the finished product.
They are often laminated with wooden veneers to improve their appearance.
Advantages
Uniform thickness
They can be veneered with decorative veneers and laminates
Relatively cheap
Use timber that might otherwise be wasted.
Disadvantages
Surfaces and edges normally require veneer.
Chipboards are weak
They are not water resistant
Generally they do not take screws well.
How Chipboard is made.