Hi Everyone
How is plywood made?

Background

Plywood is made of three or more thin layers of wood bonded together with an
adhesive.
Each layer of wood, or
ply,
is usually oriented with its grain running at right angles to the adjacent 
layer in order to reduce the shrinkage and improve the strength of the 
finished
piece. Most plywood is pressed into large, flat sheets used in building 
construction. Other plywood pieces may be formed into simple or compound 
curves
for use in furniture, boats, and aircraft.

The use of thin layers of wood as a means of construction dates to 
approximately 1500 B.C. when Egyptian craftsmen bonded thin pieces of dark
ebony
wood to the exterior of a cedar casket found in the tomb of King 
Tut-Ankh-Amon. This technique was later used by the Greeks and Romans to 
produce fine furniture
and other decorative objects. In the 1600s, the art of decorating furniture 
with thin pieces of wood became known as veneering, and the pieces 
themselves
became known as veneers.

Until the late 1700s, the pieces of
veneer
were cut entirely by hand. In 1797, Englishman Sir Samuel Bentham applied 
for patents covering several machines to produce veneers. In his patent 
applications,
he described the concept of
laminating
several layers of veneer with
glue
to form a
thicker
piece-the first description of what we now call plywood.

Despite this development, it took almost another hundred years before 
laminated veneers found any commercial uses outside of the furniture 
industry. In
about 1890, laminated woods were first used to build doors. As the demand 
grew, several companies began producing sheets of multiple-ply
laminated wood,
not only for doors, but also for use in railroad cars, busses, and 
airplanes. Despite this increased usage, the concept of using "pasted 
woods," as some
craftsmen sarcastically called them, generated a negative image for the 
product. To counter this image, the laminated wood manufacturers met and 
finally
settled on the term "plywood" to describe the new material.

In 1928, the first standard-sized 4 ft by 8 ft (1.2 m by 2.4 m) plywood 
sheets were introduced in the United States for use as a general building 
material.
In the following decades, improved adhesives and new methods of production 
allowed plywood to be used for a wide variety of applications. Today, 
plywood
has replaced cut lumber for many construction purposes, and plywood 
manufacturing has become a multi-billion dollar, worldwide industry.

Raw Materials

The outer layers of plywood are known respectively as the face and the back. 
The face is the surface that is to be used or seen, while the back remains
unused
or hidden. The center layer is known as the core. In plywoods with five or 
more plies, the inter-mediate layers are known as the crossbands.

Plywood may be made from hardwoods, softwoods, or a combination of the two. 
Some common hardwoods include ash, maple,
mahogany,
oak, and
teak.
The most common
softwood
used to make plywood in the United States is
Douglas fir,
although several varieties of pine, cedar, spruce, and
redwood
are also used.

Composite plywood has a core made of particleboard or solid lumber pieces 
joined edge to edge. It is finished with a plywood veneer face and back. 
Composite
plywood is used where very thick sheets are needed.

The type of adhesive used to bond the layers of wood together depends on the 
specific application for the finished plywood. Softwood plywood sheets 
designed
for installation on the exterior of a structure usually use a 
phenol-formaldehyde
resin
as an adhesive because of its excellent strength and resistance to
moisture.
Softwood plywood sheets designed for installation on the interior of a 
structure may use a blood protein or a
soybean
protein adhesive, although most softwood interior sheets are now made with 
the same phenol-formaldehyde resin used for exterior sheets. Hardwood 
plywood
used for interior applications and in the construction of furniture usually 
is made with a urea-formaldehyde resin.

Some applications require plywood sheets that have a thin layer of plastic, 
metal, or resin-impregnated paper or fabric bonded to either the face or 
back
(or both) to give the outer surface additional resistance to moisture and
abrasion
or to improve its paint-holding properties. Such plywood is called overlaid 
plywood and is commonly used in the construction, transportation, and 
agricultural
industries.

Other plywood sheets may be coated with a liquid stain to give the surfaces 
a finished appearance, or may be treated with various chemicals to improve 
the
plywood's flame resistance or resistance to decay.

Plywood Classification and Grading

There are two broad classes of plywood, each with its own grading system.

One class is known as construction and industrial. Plywoods in this class 
are used primarily for their strength and are rated by their exposure 
capability
and the grade of veneer used on the face and back. Exposure capability may 
be interior or exterior, depending on the type of glue. Veneer grades may be
N, A, B, C, or D. N grade has very few surface defects, while D grade may 
have numerous
knots
and splits. For example, plywood used for subflooring in a house is rated 
"Interior C-D". This means it has a C face with a D back, and the glue is 
suitable
for use in protected locations. The inner plies of all construction and 
industrial plywood are made from grade C or D veneer, no matter what the 
rating.

The other class of plywood is known as
hardwood
and decorative. Plywoods in this class are used primarily for their 
appearance and are graded in descending order of resistance to moisture as 
Technical
(Exterior), Type I (Exterior), Type II (Interior), and Type III (Interior). 
Their face veneers are virtually free of defects.

Sizes

Plywood sheets range in thickness from. 06 in (1.6 mm) to 3.0 in (76 mm). 
The most common thicknesses are in the 0.25 in (6.4 mm) to 0.75 in (19.0 mm) 
range.
Although the core, the crossbands, and the face and back of a sheet of 
plywood may be made of different thickness veneers, the thickness of each 
must balance
around the center. For example, the face and back must be of equal 
thickness. Likewise the top and bottom crossbands must be equal.

The most common size for plywood sheets used in building construction is 4 
ft (1.2 m) wide by 8 ft (2.4 m) long. Other common widths are 3 ft (0.9 m) 
and
5 ft (1.5 m). Lengths vary from 8 ft (2.4 m) to 12 ft (3.6 m) in 1 ft (0.3 
m) increments. Special applications like boat building may require larger 
sheets.

The Manufacturing
Process

The trees used to make plywood are generally smaller in diameter than those 
used to make lumber. In most cases, they have been planted and grown in 
areas
owned by the plywood company. These areas are carefully managed to maximize 
tree growth and minimize damage from insects or fire.

Here is a typical sequence of operations for processing trees into standard 
4 ft by 8 ft (1.2 m by 2.4 m) plywood sheets:

Felling the trees
. Selected trees in an area are marked as being ready to be cut down, or 
felled. The felling may be done with gasoline-powered chain saws or with 
large
hydraulic shears mounted on the front of wheeled vehicles called fellers. 
The limbs are removed from the fallen trees with chain saws.
. The trimmed tree trunks, or logs, are dragged to a loading area by wheeled 
vehicles called skidders. The logs are cut to length and are loaded on 
trucks
for the trip to the plywood mill, where they are stacked in long piles known 
as log decks.

Preparing the logs
. As logs are needed, they are picked up from the log decks by rubber-tired 
loaders and placed on a
chain conveyor
that brings them to the debarking machine. This machine removes the bark, 
either with sharp-toothed grinding wheels or with jets of high-pressure 
water,
while the log is slowly rotated about its long axis.
. The debarked logs are carried into the mill on a chain conveyor where a 
huge circular saw cuts them into sections about 8 ft-4 in (2.5 m) to 8 ft-6 
in
(2.6 m) long, suitable for making standard 8 ft (2.4 m) long sheets. These 
log sections are known as
peeler
blocks.

Making the veneer
. Before the veneer can be cut, the peeler blocks must be heated and
soaked
to
soften
the wood. The blocks may be steamed or
immersed
in hot water. This process takes 12-40 hours depending on the type of wood, 
the diameter of the block, and other factors.
. The heated peeler blocks are then transported to the peeler
lathe,
where they are automatically aligned and fed into the lathe one at a time. 
As the lathe rotates the block rapidly about its long axis, a full-length 
knife
blade peels a continuous sheet of veneer from the surface of the spinning 
block at a rate of 300-800 ft/min (90-240 m/min). When the diameter of the 
block
is reduced to about 3-4 in (230-305 mm), the remaining piece of wood, known 
as the peeler core, is ejected from the lathe and a new peeler block is fed
into place.
. The long sheet of veneer emerging from / the peeler lathe may be processed 
immediately, or it may be stored in long, multiple-level trays or wound onto
rolls. In any case, the next process involves cutting the veneer into
usable
widths, usually about 4 ft-6 in (1.4 m), for making standard 4 ft (1.2 m) 
wide plywood sheets. At the same time, optical scanners look for sections 
with
unacceptable
defects, and these are clipped out, leaving less than standard width pieces 
of veneer.
. The sections of veneer are then sorted and stacked according to grade. 
This may be done manually, or it may be done automatically using optical 
scanners.
. The sorted sections are fed into a
dryer
to reduce their
moisture content
and allow them to
shrink
before they are glued together. Most plywood mills use a mechanical dryer in 
which the pieces move continuously through a heated chamber. In some dryers,
jets of high-velocity, heated air are blown across the surface of the pieces 
to speed the drying process.
. As the sections of veneer emerge from the dryer, they are stacked 
according to grade. Underwidth sections have additional veneer
spliced
on with tape or glue to make pieces suitable for use in the interior layers 
where appearance and strength are less important.
. Those sections of veneer that will be installed crossways-the core in 
three-ply sheets, or the crossbands in five-ply sheets-are cut into lengths 
of about
4 ft-3 in (1.3 m).

Forming the plywood sheets
. When the appropriate sections of veneer are assembled for a particular run 
of plywood, the process of laying up and gluing the pieces together begins.
This may be done manually or semi-automatically with machines. In the 
simplest case of three-ply sheets, the
back veneer
is laid flat and is run through a glue
spreader,
which applies a layer of glue to the upper surface. The short sections of 
core veneer are then laid crossways on top of the glued back, and the whole 
sheet
is run through the glue spreader a second time. Finally, the
face veneer
is laid on top of the glued core, and the sheet is stacked with other sheets 
waiting to go into the press.
. The glued sheets are loaded into a multiple-opening hot press. presses can 
handle 20-40 sheets at a time, with each sheet loaded in a separate slot. 
When
all the sheets are loaded, the press squeezes them together under a pressure 
of about 110-200 psi (7.6-13.8 bar), while at the same time heating them to
a temperature of about 230-315° F (109.9-157.2° C). The pressure assures 
good contact between the layers of veneer, and the heat causes the glue to 
cure
properly for maximum strength. After a period of 2-7 minutes, the press is 
opened and the sheets are unloaded.
. The rough sheets then pass through a set of saws, which trim them to their 
final width and length. Higher grade sheets pass through a set of 4 ft (1.2
m) wide belt sanders, which sand both the face and back. Intermediate grade 
sheets are manually spot sanded to clean up rough areas. Some sheets are run
through a set of circular saw blades, which cut shallow grooves in the face 
to give the plywood a textured appearance. After a final inspection, any 
remaining
defects are repaired.
. The finished sheets are stamped with a grade-trademark that gives the 
buyer information about the exposure rating, grade, mill number, and other 
factors.
Sheets of the same grade-trademark are strapped together in stacks and moved 
to the warehouse to
await
shipment.

Quality Control

Just as with lumber, there is no such thing as a perfect piece of plywood. 
All pieces of plywood have a certain amount of defects. The number and 
location
of these defects determines the plywood grade. Standards for construction 
and industrial plywoods are defined by Product Standard PS1 prepared by the 
National
Bureau of Standards and the American Plywood Association. Standards for 
hardwood and decorative plywoods are defined by ANSIIHPMA HP prepared by the 
American
National Standards Institute and the Hardwood Plywood Manufacturers' 
Association. These standards not only establish the grading systems for 
plywood, but
also specify construction, performance, and application criteria.

The Future

Even though plywood makes fairly efficient use of trees-essentially taking 
them apart and putting them back together in a stronger, more usable 
configuration-there
is still considerable waste inherent in the manufacturing process. In most 
cases, only about 50-75% of the usable volume of wood in a tree is converted
into plywood. To improve this figure, several new products are under 
development.

One new product is called oriented strand board, which is made by shredding 
the entire log into strands, rather than peeling a veneer from the log and 
discarding
the core. The strands are mixed with an adhesive and compressed into layers 
with the grain running in one direction. These compressed layers are then 
oriented
at right angles to each other, like plywood, and are bonded together. 
Oriented strand board is as strong as plywood and costs slightly less. 



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