Douglas fir timber windows


















The rustic flavor of the wood can make it ideal for flooring, exterior siding, and interior paneling, as well. Like all softwoods, one issue that can be a negative is that the Douglas Fir wood is, as the softwood name implies, softer than hardwoods. This can mean that the wood can be more easily damaged, so care must be taken in milling, handling, and transporting the lumber.

Of the two basic types of Douglas Fir trees, the Coastal variety grows to be taller and yield more structural timbers for framing, J. Gibson McIlvain uses primarily timbers we purchase directly from mills located in the Pacific Northwest U.

To help alleviate that problem, we keep plenty of Douglas Fir lumber stored in our facilities on the West Coast, ready to ship to customers that are closer to the point of origin than to our Maryland locale.

We use Accoya for all our engineered stave cores. It costs more but provides greater benefits. One solution may be to use the premium wood species in the high-profile rooms for example, the Great Room, Master Bedroom and Kitchen to get the WOW factor where you really want it. The Guest House or perhaps the bedrooms could have a lower-cost species. Get creative. However, sawed for vertical grain and graded for "superior finish," the cost rises by at least three times.

Douglas fir plywood in all grades is readily available. Douglas Fir. The globe-trotting he-man of American softwoods. Pin FB More. All rights reserved. Close Sign in. Close this dialog window View image Douglas Fir. The Douglas Fir tree can really be broken into two distinct varieties: coastal and Rocky Mountain. Gibson McIlvain Co supplies the coastal variety almost exclusively, because it grows much larger and produces a higher yield of structural timbers for our timber framing customers.

Despite its name, Douglas Fir is not actually a fir genus Abies , but it shares many common features with Hemlocks and has been grouped with them in common usage.

The wood has very straight grain with creamy-yellow earlywood and red-brown latewood lines that give the wood an overall orange cast in color. The distinct hardness difference between early and latewood lines can make for milling issues, and tool edges must be kept sharp to prevent tear out and splintering.

Douglas Fir lumber has become the standard wood of choice for timber framing and exposed beam building due to the high availability of large timber sizes.



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