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Specifications
How wide can I go in heart pine and heart cypress?
Flooring is available in widths up to 10," with a 9"
face after the tongue and groove is applied. Heart pine logs
may be two to five hundred years old but are often no more
than 24 inches in diameter. It can take up to 30 years for
a heart pine tree to put on just one inch of girth. Heart
pine lumber is available up to 12 inches with occasional slabs
up to 18 inches. Heart Cypress is much larger and Goodwin
has recovered logs up to 1,700 years old. Heart cypress slabs
are available up to 42."
Is heart pine hard enough for wood flooring? What about
heart cypress?
Heart pine is almost as hard as red oak (1225 vs. 1290 on
the floor hardness scale) and is 29 percent more stable than
Oak according to the NWFA. George Washington's floor in Mt.
Vernon is over 250 years old and is still walked on every
day. Heart cypress is a softer wood, comparable in hardness
to Douglas fir, however many clients rave about it as flooring.
Do you need to end match heart pine?
The average length of a heart pine floorboard is 7-8 feet
and we cut them 2-4" longer than marked. Floorboards
in oak generally average 2-4 feet in length and require endmatching
for added support when spanning floor joists. Remember that
end-matching equipment may require the manufacturer to cut
all of your longest boards to fit into the machine.
I need to match an old heart pine floor for repairs or for
an addition. What do I need to tell you?
There are many questions to answer including lengths, color
matching, knots, grain pattern, growth rings and face width
and thickness. To assure the best possible match to an old
heart pine floor we ask you to mail us a small piece so we
can check the milling. You also need to measure whether the
flooring is all the same width. The number and size of knots
and the grain pattern of the original floor are the most critical
factors to ensure that the wood we sell you is an appropriate
match.
What do I call the match if it’s not flooring match?
Tongue & groove can be “flooring match” where
the standard is 8/32 on top, 9/32 in the tongue and 7/32 wood
below the tongue for a ¾” thick product. “Center
match” is an older milling technique where the tongue
and groove is in the center of the board. If you have an old
floor that you are trying to match, you may find that you
have neither center match nor flooring match and may need
custom milling. None of this is to be confused with “end
matching” which calls for a tongue & groove on the
ends of the boards and is generally done only for floors such
as oak that are short, 2’ – 4’ on average.
What would be the maximum lengths for a 5/8” floor?
There is no reason to make 5/8” floor. Boards that
thin tend to “sweep” and can’t be securely
glued down. We have, however, done a floor using 3/8”
boards with lengths of 3 feet.
How old are your Cherry logs? What is the average # of knots
per 100SF? How would you compare Northern Cherry versus Southern
Cherry versus your Wild Black Cherry?
The Wild Black Cherry we offer comes from 50-75 year old
trees. Many are 2-3 feet in diameter. These trees had few
lower branches meaning it runs very clear with few knots.
There tends to be more figure and the wood maintains more
of the red & pink tones as opposed to the northern cherry
that turns a darker brown with age. At most, cherry will have
15-20 sound and tight small knots per 100 SF.
What else comes as wide as heart pine and what is the cost
difference?
Barry Strup of The Woods Company sells antique oak 7-10”
random width at $9.40/SF and chestnut 7-10” random width
for $11.20/SF. All defects and character marks are left in
at these prices – no grading is done.
You allow knots in all ‘non-clear’ products,
1-1/4” or smaller and the knot ‘excludes casing’.
What is casing?
The casing is the wood that immediately surrounds the knot.
Because we only allow for sound, tight knots, of 1 ¼”
or less, the casing adds very little to the overall diameter
of the knot.
I really don’t want a red patina. What else do you
have?
Antique Heart Cypress has warm brown tones or you could keep
the Heart Pine from turning red with an ultra violet inhibitor
in the finish.
My bathroom has linoleum over a plywood floor. How can I
get a wood floor and what kind of wood is suitable?
Because a bathroom can have a good deal of variation in moisture
levels, I would recommend using a vertical grain pattern because
it expands & contracts through the thickness rather than
the width of the board. You may also want to consider applying
a sealer to the back of the flooring that will add stability.
Vertical heart cypress would be a good choice due to the high
resistance to decay due to moisture.
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