Thursday, October 04, 2007

Finger Jointed Lumber



I have been thinking and obsessing about finger jointed lumber off and on for the past 5 years. It all started when I visited a Georgia Pacific- Finger Jointing Mill in Tylertown, Mississippi. In T-town, they get all the cut-offs (cut off pieces from saw mills, usually 6-18 inches long) and finger joint them into 2x4 or 2x6 studs. These studs are straight as a die (no warping), defect free (no knots) and they are precision cut to length.
Finger jointed lumber is an engineered wood product. It's nothing new, people have been splicing lumber and gluing it up for a century. Today finger jointing can be found anywhere wood is being used.
What I like the most about finger jointed lumber is it's simplicity and efficiency. You can take small pieces of lumber that would have no real practical purpose by themselves, but when profiled and glued to one another, blam!

A true synergy of resource utilization and efficiency.

1 Comments:

Blogger markmcc said...

CAse, i'm going to post more on the finger joint that will help clear up any ambiguity.

4:11 PM  

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