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Processes Used to
Form Wood Materials
Chapter 16
Bonding Processes
• Use heat and pressure to compact particles or chips into sheet
stock
• Creates Composition board
• Board made of wood that has been broken down into particles or
fibers
Three major types of Composition Boards
• Hardboard
• Continuous mat of pulp that is pressed into a sheet
• Used for floor underlayment, cabinet making, etc.
• MDF, MDO
• Insulation board
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Made from pulp wood and bagasse (from sugar cane)
Low density
High heat resistance
Good acoustical barrier
• Not common
• Particle board
• Many varieties
• Wood chips mixed with resin are pressed into board shape
• Not common
Waferboard
• Made using high quality wood flakes
• About .028” thick, 1.5” wide and between 3” and 6” long
• Bonded together under heat and pressure with phenolic resin
• Construction and furniture making industries
• Not used anymore, replaced by osb type products
Oriented Strand Board (OSB)
• Made from wood fibers bonded together with resins and glue
• Large and irregularly shaped
• Layers of fibers are oriented perpendicular to the last layer
Lamination Process
• Sandwiching sheets or pieces of wood together
• Plywood
• Gluing layers together
• Grain of layers is perpendicular
• Odd number of layers so outside layers have parallel grain
• Reconstituted wood
• Made from plywood cut into strips smaller than .030”
• Strips are glued together
• Looks like real wood
Advantages of Lamination
• Less wasteful than cutting
• Shapes like large beams or arches
• Stronger than solid stock
• Grain of layers oriented to add strength
• Cost
• High quality materials used for faces, lower quality materials used
for inside layers
Bending Processes
• Can be bent across or with grain
• With is easier
• Done dry or wet
• Wet is easier with some woods
• Prevents fracture
• Some hardwoods suited to bend
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White oak
Elm
Hickory
Ash
Birch
Maple
Walnut
• Softwoods are difficult to bend
Wet or Hot Bending
Steaming or soaking
• Best method
• Stock is subjected to steam or soaked in boiling water
• Reaches about 20% moisture content
• Then formed into desired shape
Laminating in a two-piece mold
• Using a forming jig and adhesive
Cold or Dry Bending
• Hydraulic cold presses used to form plywood
• Use of pressure to form into a mold