Some Useful Information About Treated
Lumber
People are increasingly
bringing their daily lives outdoors. This information will
hopefully help you choose some outdoor furniture that's right
for you. First, identify your outdoor lifestyle. Do you want
your outdoor spaces informal or formal, intimate or outgoing?
Next, work with your existing plan, builder, and landscaper to
blend your needs with the surroundings of your new house.
The right material makes all the difference in the world
when creating beautiful, long-lasting outdoor patio furniture.
Lumber is divided into grades based on the number of obvious
flaws, such as knots, sap pockets, splits, and other
blemishes. Here at
C C Woodshop, we use only #1 Grade
Treated Lumber that is Arsenic Free picking out the
straightest, best-looking boards for surfaces that will show
and those that don't. We have found that buying mid-grade
lumber is not cost effective as the culling process causes us
to waste more lumber than if we would have stayed with #1
Grade in the first place! . We stay away from the lowest
grades COMPLETELY as knotty or warped lumber is difficult to
work with and will weaken the furniture not to mention look
UGLY!!
Here at
C C Woodshop, we use several different kinds of lumber
in our outdoor furniture construction. Our most popular and
least expensive choice with our customers is Arsenic Free
Treated Lumber usually made of pine. Other choices include
Western Red Cedar & Redwood, both being considerably
more expensive.
Care & maintanance of treated
furniture is quite simple. Once about every 6 months or so,
you can spray your furniture with a spray on water sealer
(Available at Home Depot, Lowes, Ect.) to preserve the "new"
look of your furniture. Or if you prefer to let the wood age
naturally, no sealer is required and the wood will weather to
a beautiful Barnwood type finish. The sealer mearly
preserves the "Look" of the wood, as the wood itself is
already protected.
A Little About The Chemicals
Used
The wood industry has come up with a few
arsenic free wood treatments to replace CCA (Chromated
Copper Arsenate). Two common alternatives are known as
Preserve (www.treatedwood.com)
and Wolmanized Natural Select (www.naturalselect.com)
lumbers. Preserve's preservative is alkaline copper
quaternary, or ACQ. Natural Select uses copper azole as its
preservative. Both brands rely on copper as their primary
fungicide; the quaternary protects against termites and other
fungi that tolerate copper. Both Preserve and Natural Select
protect wood as well as CCA-treated wood, yet are far less
toxic to humans, making them a good choice in areas where
other alternatives aren't practical - structural support
members or deck pilings, for example. These are chemical
preservatives though, and the copper they contain could be
toxic to earthworms and other beneficial soil microbes, so
they shouldn't be used in the garden.
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