Transcript Chapter 11

Chapter 11
Veneer
Copyright © 2009 Delmar, Cengage Learning
Objectives
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Define veneer
Discuss the production of veneer
List the different methods of cutting veneer
Identify the different types of veneer
Explain the different thicknesses of veneer and
what they are used for
Copyright © 2009 Delmar, Cengage Learning
Introduction
• Veneer: thin slice of log or timber
• Was used extensively in classic furniture of
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
• Used now:
– In the production of manufactured panel products
– In making curved shapes
– To enhance plain surfaces
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Veneer Production
• Best logs (select logs) that are cut are sold for
veneer production
– Veneer logs are debarked, cut to length, and then
softened by immersion in hot water or by steaming
before veneer is cut from them
• Called peeler blocks
• Highly decorative veneers are also cut from burl,
crotch, and butt, or stump, wood
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Figure 11-6 Veneer cut from burl, crotch, and stump
material is highly decorative.
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Veneer Production (continued)
• Veneer cut from burls has a circling, wavy,
knotty pattern
• Veneer cut from crotch wood exhibits a highly
figured V-grain, sometimes called a flame
pattern
• Veneer cut from the stump has a wrinkled line
pattern
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Veneer Production (continued)
• Three ways of cutting veneer
– Rotary cutting, slicing, and stay-log cutting
• Rotary cutting
– Log is turned on a lathe and rotated against a
stationary knife
– Fastest method of cutting veneer
– Produces the greatest amount of veneer from any
given log
– Used to make ninety percent of all veneer
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Veneer Production (continued)
• Slicing
– Method by which most hardwood veneer is cut
– Two types of slicing: flat slicing and quarter slicing
– Flat slicing:
• Peeler block is cut in half lengthwise
• The two halves are known as flitches
• A flitch is attached to a flitch table that moves up and
down against a stationary knife
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Figure 11-14 Flat slicing veneer.
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Veneer Production (continued)
• Slicing (continued)
– Quarter slicing:
• Same as flat slicing except that the log is quartered
rather than halved
• Results in a far different look than plain slicing
produces
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Veneer Production (continued)
• Stay-log cutting
– Log may or may not be cut into flitches first
– Either the log or the flitch is mounted on a lathe with
an eccentric chuck and swung against the knife
– Three different patterns may be produced: rift, half
round, and back-cut
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Figure 11-18 Stay-log rift-cut veneer cutting.
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Veneer Production (continued)
• Stay-log cutting (continued)
– Rift cutting:
• Cutting at a 45° angle to the annual rings
• Log is first quartered into four flitches
• Results in a very straight-grained veneer
– Half-round cuts
• Produce a large U-patterned grain
• Peeler block is halved, and cuts are made from the
rounded side of the flitch
Copyright © 2009 Delmar, Cengage Learning
Veneer Production (continued)
• Stay-log cutting (continued)
– Back cutting:
• Peeler block is cut in half lengthwise
• Cuts are taken from the flat part of the flitch
• Produces grain pattern very similar to that found in flatsliced veneer
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Veneer Production (continued)
• After veneer is cut, it is clipped to various widths;
defects are cut out
• Next, veneer is dried to less than 10 percent
moisture content
• Once dry, it is clipped to length
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Veneer Production (continued)
• Veneer thicknesses
– 1/10˝ to 3/16˝ thick: thickest veneer; used as plies in
plywood
– 1/28˝ to 1/40˝ thick: used to enhance plain surfaces or
used as face and back veneers in the production of
cabinet plywood
– 1/40˝ to 1/100˝ thick: thinnest veneer; used to make
reinforced veneers
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Summary
• Veneer: thin slice of wood ranging in thickness
from 1/100 to 3/16 of an inch
• Veneer is produced from the highest quality logs
• Veneer is cut by one of three methods: rotary
cutting, slicing, or stay-log cutting
• Veneer is sliced in different thicknesses for
different applications
Copyright © 2009 Delmar, Cengage Learning