sketchucation logo sketchucation
    • 登入
    Oops, your profile's looking a bit empty! To help us tailor your experience, please fill in key details like your SketchUp version, skill level, operating system, and more. Update and save your info on your profile page today!
    ⚠️ Important | Libfredo 15.6b introduces important bugfixes for Fredo's Extensions Update

    List of International Lumber Sizes Needed

    已排程 已置頂 已鎖定 已移動 Corner Bar
    29 貼文 8 Posters 1.1k 瀏覽 8 Watching
    正在載入更多貼文
    • 從舊到新
    • 從新到舊
    • 最多點贊
    回覆
    • 在新貼文中回覆
    登入後回覆
    此主題已被刪除。只有擁有主題管理權限的使用者可以查看。
    • thomthomT 離線
      thomthom
      最後由 編輯

      Martin, have you looked at the Woodworking userboard? Maybe a post there will make your question more visible to people within the trade?

      Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
      List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

      1 條回覆 最後回覆 回覆 引用 0
      • M 離線
        mics_54
        最後由 編輯

        There isn't much more if anything to add.

        1 條回覆 最後回覆 回覆 引用 0
        • jeff hammondJ 離線
          jeff hammond
          最後由 編輯

          @martinrinehart said:

          Here, for example, 3/4 inch plywood is permitted 1/32 variation. Our 3/4 plywood is always 23/32 thick.

          well, 23/32 is actually printed on the sheets and then the variation comes into play so 3/4" ply is often 11/16" thick..

          (3/4 ply is just a lot easier to communicate than saying/typing/ordering 23/32)

          dotdotdot

          1 條回覆 最後回覆 回覆 引用 0
          • M 離線
            mics_54
            最後由 編輯

            This is a humorous thread asking about acceptable variations and tolerances in production of plywood that is "always" 1/32 less than that by what it is commonly refered even though it is stamped 23/32...which is what it "always" is. Perhaps it is tolerances and variation in language or nominclature that is the issue. If this variation is to be coded into a ruby, I am going to be very confused. Would I follow it with a ._s or a ._i ?
            If plywood sold at the yard is stamped 23/32 and there is an "acceptable" 1/32 tolerance, but it's always 23/32...why do we call it 3/4" plywood then claim it's a tolerance issue and within spec?
            Does 3/4" plywood even exist anymore?

            1 條回覆 最後回覆 回覆 引用 0
            • jeff hammondJ 離線
              jeff hammond
              最後由 編輯

              @mics_54 said:

              Does 3/4" plywood even exist anymore?

              yeah, i occasionally need 5x10s and my source provides AC grade 5'x10' 3/4 fir ply that's actually 3/4" thick..

              bottom line, with standard grade lumber, never assume your lumber package is going to be exactly anything.. onsite adjustments are normal practice.

              dotdotdot

              1 條回覆 最後回覆 回覆 引用 0
              • M 離線
                mics_54
                最後由 編輯

                @unknownuser said:

                onsite adjustments are normal practice.

                Which is exactly the issue. This is why "# comments" in a ruby would exist. Actual dimensions of assemblies such as multiple cabinets or roof structures grow as they are assembled irl requiring adjustments at some point. Bird block lengths between trusses are trimmed as needed to keep trusses on layout.
                Assemblies of laminated products from manufactured sheetgoods may have caused the manufacturers to reduce dimensions to accomidate additional layers of adhesives in response to a specific but major market share of their product....or it may have been an attempt to satisfy the needs of imperial and metric standards simultaniously.
                Interesting but how is it relevent to ruby programming methods? I hope we don't intend to write .rb files that automatically adjust 3/4==23/32 else if etc.
                As a cabinet maker 1/32 only matters sometimes. Uniformity is of more importance. Solid lumber varies considerably from moisture as well as production. Such variations are not controllable large scale given vast climate variations/time/logistics. Solid lumber will be made uniform by the user. Engineered products will not so it makes sense that engineered products need be held to more stringent standards. I feel confident that profit governs the standards.
                I'm still not sure how this information would be of relevence in woodworking programming language...I am interested...just ignorant.

                1 條回覆 最後回覆 回覆 引用 0
                • T 離線
                  tomot
                  最後由 編輯

                  @unknownuser said:

                  @tomot said:

                  Now the question! Does anyone really care if the wall you are drawing is really 4"wide or 3.5"wide?

                  what? of course it matters.. a lot
                  (unless you're just drawing something purely for illustrative purposes)

                  Within the context of the discussion about lumber sizes, and copying "Quotes out of context". It still does not matter if I draw the exact size of a 2 x 4 precisely 1.5" x 3.5" or be it in metric 38 mm x 89 mm. As a Contractor I don't care, Nor do I care as a Framer. What I do care about; is notes on the working drawings describing size of studs, dimension preferably FOS to FOS. Specifications describing the quality of the lumber, and details of how the Rough Framing is to join with various other manufactured items such as doors and windows, which will help me give a quote for material and labor to the owner. As a Contractor involved in building high end Houses, I'm much more concerned about lumber shrinkage, moisture content which can cause of major problems with various applied finishes.

                  In addition it should be noted that dressed S4S lumber used in Finish Carpentry has its own sizes. Hence doing a set of shop drawings for a Kitchen Cabinets would be require more exact drawing detail. Where the sizes of the individual pieces would require much greater precision in drafting detail and dimensioning.

                  [my plugins](http://thingsvirtual.blogspot.ca/)
                  tomot

                  1 條回覆 最後回覆 回覆 引用 0
                  • daikuD 離線
                    daiku
                    最後由 編輯

                    @mics_54 said:

                    Does 3/4" plywood even exist anymore?

                    Just buy a sheet of 23/32, and let it get wet!

                    Clark Bremer
                    http://www.northernlightstimberframing.com

                    1 條回覆 最後回覆 回覆 引用 0
                    • jeff hammondJ 離線
                      jeff hammond
                      最後由 編輯

                      @tomot said:

                      As a Contractor I don't care, Nor do I care as a Framer. What I do care about; is notes on the working drawings describing size of studs, dimens.....

                      ah, ok.. i didn't see where you were coming from..
                      i'm a design/build contractor and i always have a laptop onsite instead of prints and i use it for certain calculations etc where it does matter in it's accuracy.. but, from that, i'll hand out cut/assembly lists/diagrams which are scribbled on scraps etc and i bet if you actually scaled out some of those drawings, a 2x4-8 might really be a 8x10-14 😄.. so yeah, at some point, it doesn't matter how accurately it's drawn and only the numbers written next to them are important..

                      dotdotdot

                      1 條回覆 最後回覆 回覆 引用 0
                      • 1
                      • 2
                      • 2 / 2
                      • 第一個貼文
                        最後的貼文
                      Buy SketchPlus
                      Buy SUbD
                      Buy WrapR
                      Buy eBook
                      Buy Modelur
                      Buy Vertex Tools
                      Buy SketchCuisine
                      Buy FormFonts

                      Advertisement