Home ›
Douglas Fir Flooring Unfinished
- warning: Illegal string offset 'filepath' in /home/nshardwo/public_html/sites/all/themes/arborvalley/template.php on line 239.
- warning: Illegal string offset 'filepath' in /home/nshardwo/public_html/sites/all/themes/arborvalley/template.php on line 240.
- warning: Illegal string offset 'alt' in /home/nshardwo/public_html/sites/all/themes/arborvalley/template.php on line 240.
- warning: Illegal string offset 'title' in /home/nshardwo/public_html/sites/all/themes/arborvalley/template.php on line 240.
- warning: Illegal string offset 'alt' in /home/nshardwo/public_html/sites/all/themes/arborvalley/template.php on line 247.
- warning: Illegal string offset 'filename' in /home/nshardwo/public_html/sites/all/themes/arborvalley/template.php on line 247.
- warning: Illegal string offset 'title' in /home/nshardwo/public_html/sites/all/themes/arborvalley/template.php on line 247.
- warning: Illegal string offset 'filepath' in /home/nshardwo/public_html/sites/all/themes/arborvalley/template.php on line 251.
Color: Heartwood is yellowish tan to light brown. Sapwood is tan to white. Heartwood may be confused with that of Southern yellow pine. Radical color change upon exposure to sunlight.
Grain: Normally Straight, with occasional wavy or spiral texture. Nearly all fir flooring is vertical-grain or riftsawn clear-grade material.
Variations within Species and Grades: Wood varies greatly in weight and strength. Young trees of moderate to rapid growth have reddish heartwood and are called red fir. The narrow-ringed wood of old trees may be yellowish-brown and is known as yellow fir.
Properties
Hardness(JANKA): 660 (49% softer than Northern Red Oak).
Dimensional Stability: Above average (7.3; 15% more stable than Northern Red Oak).
in