Hot demand and high prices in North America have created a big market
opportunity for imported wood panel products.  Some of these products,
however, may not live up to the quality that builders have come to expect
from the North American wood structural panel industry

APA ¡V The Engineered Wood Association recently consulted on a residential
job in Maryland and a commercial project in Pennsylvania and found that the
panel products used in both were inappropriate for the job. In one case, the
panels were marked with incomplete grade stamps; in the other, the panels
were unmarked. In both cases, panel quality was substandard for the intended
application and the panels were removed from the job sites.

In the first occurrence, Walt Schneider, P.E., with John C. Haas Associates
had specified 3/4" Plyform panels for a complicated ramp demolition/rebuild
for Pennsylvania State University. The forms were in place before the
demolition began and would remain through the new pour.

Workers had complained about weak panels, and when one snapped under the
weight of a worker, Schneider investigated. 

The panels had no grade markings, making it impossible to verify veneer
grade, certification, or country of origin. The questionable panels were
torn out and replaced with properly certified panels. 

 ¡§This is nasty stuff,¡¨ said Schneider. ¡§As a structural engineer, this
scares the hell out of me.¡¨

In the second instance, Bill Bryant, chief building inspector for the County
of Anne Arundel in Maryland, was called to inspect some plywood panels used
as wall and roof sheathing on a residence in his district. The stamp
included a third-party certification trademark; however, Bryant has seen
enough stamps to know that the mark didn¡¦t look right. His instincts proved
correct, as the stamp did not provide the information required by the
product standard nor the building code, i.e. the certification agency
trademark, span rating, thickness, and bond classification. 

Bryant had the offending product torn out and replaced with properly
certified product. Bryant, a veteran building official who logs upwards of
35 inspections per day, has noticed an increase in imports and questions
product consistency with required quality standards. It was determined that
the imported plywood in question was manufactured for non-building
construction use such as pallets, but the panels had been misapplied in a
sheathing application. While culpability is hard to pin on anyone in
particular, a general lack of grade stamp knowledge along the distribution
chain is clearly contributing to problems expressed herein.

APA remains vigilant against counterfeits and product misapplication in
North America to protect builders and the public.

Why should builders care?

Engineered wood products, like many U.S. products, are manufactured under
voluntary product and performance standards (PS 1-95 Construction and
Industrial Plywood, PS 2-92 Performance Standard for Wood-based Structural
Use Panels). The Office of Standards Services of the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST) assists in developing voluntary product
standards on a nationwide basis through the cooperative efforts of
producers, distributors, consumers, and users. Imported or off-grade
products, may not meet the strict criteria necessary for the intended
application. Such panels could certainly impact building durability or worse
case, compromise life-safety.

Policing this threat is largely up to the professionals within the industry:
code officials, builders, specifiers, designers, engineers, dealers and
certification agencies all play a vital role in keeping substandard product
off the market. 

The best time to check grading stamps is when the bundles are cut. Grading
agencies in the U.S. have clearly defined stamps. The typical APA stamp will
have the following information:

¡P         Certification agency trademark

¡P         Panel grade (STURD-I-FLOOR, RATED SHEATHING, 
RATED SIDING or plywood grade (A-C, C-D)

¡P         Span rating and thickness (e.g. a span rating of 32/16 means that
the panel can be used for a maximum span of 32" on a roof and 16" on a
floor)

¡P         Exposure classification (Exposure 1 panels are suitable for
wetting and drying under normal construction conditions; Exterior panels are
designed for long-term exposure to weather)

¡P         Mill number

*       Product and or Performance standard (PS 1-95, PS 2-92, PRP-108) 

Substandard panels often give themselves away during installation. Panels
that flex excessively or break under low loads may be manufactured from
species with inferior strength or with improper adhesive bonds. If builders
have concerns as to the validity of the mark, contact the APA Helpline at
253-62.... A photo of the stamp may help us determine the source and course
of action. 

 



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