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A complete "Woodipedia" of lumber terms for experts & amateur woodworkers alike.
Woodipedia Index | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |
Lumber Glossary Term | Definition |
L | Larch |
Lacewood | When some woods are quarter-swan, a mottled effect is revealed in the section through the medullar rays. In some woods, like maple and elm, the effect is very subtle, but in others it is regular and distinctive. The classic examples are European or London place (Platanus acerifolia) and Roupala (Roupala brasiliensis). These species are often referred to as lacewood. |
Lacquers | A finish; a clear varnish. |
Lag Screw | A large screw, usually 4 inches or longer, with a hex head, tuned with a wrench. |
Laminate | A thin, plastic material used to cover a board. The most common use of laminate is for counter and table tops. It is often referred to by the brand name Formica ®. |
Laminated Wood | A “piece” of wood built up of plies or layers that have been joined; either with glue or mechanical fastenings. The term is most frequently applied where the plies are too thick to be classified as veneer and when the grain of all plies is parallel. |
Laminated Veneer Lumber (LVL) | Structural wood members constructed of veneers laminated to make a “flitch” from which pieces of specific sizes can be trimmed. |
Land Base | Acres of forest land that are actually available for forest management. This involves future trends not only in forest growth but also in deletions from the land base. |
Land Classifications |
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Landing | A cleared area in the woods to which logs are yarded for loading onto trucks for shipment to a processing plant. This is also known as brow, deck, dock, or ramp. |
Land-Use Classes |
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Lath | A thin, narrow wooden strip, used as a backing for wall plaster or other materials. |
Latewood (Summer Wood) | The part of a trees annual growth ring that is formed later in the season. |
Latex Paint | A paint containing pigments and a stable water suspension of synthetic resins that forms an opaque film through coalescence of the resin during water evaporation and subsequent curing. |
Lathe Checks | In rotary cut and sliced veneer, the fractures or checks that develop along the grain of the veneer as the knife peels veneer from the log. The knife side of the veneer where checks occur is called the loose side. The opposite and log side of the veneer where checking usually does not occur is called the tight side. |
Lattice | A framework of crossed wood made of laths or other thin pieces of wood. Lattice often can be bought pre-made in 4x8 sheets. |
LB | Lumber |
LCL | Less than Carload |
Leave Strip | A strip of uncut timber left between cutting units or adjacent to another resource such as a stream. This is also known as a buffer strip, green strip, or streamside management zone. |
Ledger | A length of a board that is horizontally attached to the side of a house and holds up one edge of a deck. |
Less than Carload (LCL) | This term indicates that a railcar is not loaded full, nor does it meet minimum requirements as prescribed by railed tariffs. |
Level | An instrument for asserting whether a surface is horizontal, vertical, or at a 45 degree angle; essentially consists of an encased, liquid-filled tube containing an air bubble that moves to a center window when an instrument is set on an even plane. |
LF | Light Framing |
LFVC | Loaded fullvisible capacity |
LGR | Longer |
LGTH | Length LIN (Lineal) |
Light Framing (LF) | The national grading rules contains three grades of light framing; construction, standard and utility. Nominal sizes are 2 to 4 inches thick and 2 to 4 inches wide. The abbreviation (LF) is used to indicate a specific section in the grading rules under which the lumber was graded. |
Light Sap Stain | A slight difference in color which will not materially impair the appearance of a piece if given a natural finish. |
Lignin | A complex chemical substance making up approximately 25% of wood substance; interspersed with cellulose in forming the cell wall. Lignin stiffens the cell and functions as a bonding agent between cells; the second most abundant constituent of wood, located in the secondary wall and the middle lamella. |
Limbwood | The part of the tree above the stump that does not meet the requirement for saw logs or upper stem portions. Includes all live, sound branches to a 4-inch outside back diameter minimum. |
Limestone | A sedimentary rock composed largely to minerals calcite, and/or aragonite, which are different crystal forms of calcium. |
Lineal (LIN) | A term referring to length; lineal footage is the total length in feet of a piece or of all pieces of the same width in a shipment. It is used largely for specialty itmes such as mouldings and millwork. |
Linear Foot | A measurement of the length of a board (i.e. – Three 8-foot-long 2x4s and four 6-foot-long 2x4s both would be described as 24 linear feet of 2x4s). |
Line Level | A level that hangs from a mason’s line; typically used to transfer level elevations from one post to another. |
Linseed Oil | This is an amber-colored, fatty oil extracted form the cotyledon and inner coats of the linseed. The raw oil extracted from the seeds by hydraulic pressure is pale in color and practically without taste or order. When boiled or extracted by application of heat and pressure, it is darker, has a bitter taste and an unpleasant odor. |
Live Load | The amount of weight any structure is designed to support. Most deck designs call for a live load of 60 pounds per square foot. |
LNG | Lining |
Load Area | The area found by multiplying the beam spacing by the post spacing to determine the post thickness required by building codes. |
Loaded to Full Visible Capacity (LFVC) | A railroad term to accord light weight lumber shipments the same freight rate consideration as heavier species on higher carload minimum weights. If a car is loaded full, shipper obtains benefit of lowest rate even though minimum weight requirements for lowest rate haven’t been met. |
Loading Jack | Rigging suspended from a spar tree guy line immediately above the line of haul and terminating in a loading block. |
Lock Set | A door lock. |
Log | 8-foot or longer tree segment. |
Log Deck | A pile of logs on a wood landing or in a mill yard. |
Logger | A person employed in the production of logs and/or wood from standing timber, also known as a Lumberjack. |
Logging Plan | Used in the eastern and western regions: layout, on a topographical map, of roads, landings, and setting boundaries of a logging area. |
Logging Residues | Unused portions of pole timber and saw timber trees killed by land clearing, cultural operations, or timber harvesting. |
Logging Setting | An area to be logged; a block or strip. |
Logging Truck | A vehicle used to transport logs. A logging truck consists of a cob, containing the engine and a place for the driver to sit, and a trailer on which logs are placed. The trailer usually has an adjustable carriage in order to accommodate loads of various lengths. |
Log Jack | A tool used to raise a log from the ground during bucking. Similar to a peavey, but with a flattened steel loop on the underside so when the hook fastens into a log on the ground and the handle is lowered, the log is jacked up and remains elevated. |
Log Rule | A table intended to show the amounts of lumber that may be sawn from logs of different sizes under various assumed conditions. |
Log Scale | Measure of the volume of wood in log/logs, usually expressed in board feet and based on various log scaling rules. |
London Dispersion Forces | Intermolecular attraction forces between non-polar molecules that result when instantaneous dipoles induce matching dipoles in neighboring molecules. |
Long Butt | A section cut from the bottom log of a tree and culled because of rot and other defects. |
Long-Line Skidding | At term currently synonymous with skyline skidding. |
Longitudinal | Parallel to the direction of the wood fibers. |
Long-Span Skidding | A cable system capable of skidding logs for 3,000 feet or more. |
Longwood | Pulpwood 120 inches or more in length. |
Longwood Harvesting | A timber harvesting method in which harvested trees are moved to the landing either as whole trees or as topped and limbed tree-length logs. At the landing, further processing such a limbing, topping, bucking, chipping, or loading is carried out as necessary. |
Loose Knot | A knot not held in place by growth, shape or position. |
Loosened or Raised Grain | Consists of a small portion of the wood being loosened or raised but not displaced. |
Low Voltage Lighting | Commercially available lighting systems that use a transformer to reduce the needed electrical current. These lighting systems are designed for do-it-yourself applications. |
LP | Lodgepole Pine |
Lumber | Logs which have been sawn, planed, and cut to length; a manufacture product derived from a log in a saw mill, or in a sawmill and planing mill. Which when rough shall have been sawed, edged and trimmed at least to the extent of showing saw marks in the wood on the four longitudinal surfaces of each piece for its overall length, and which has not been further manufactured other than by cross-cutting, ripping, resawing, joining crosswise and/or endwise in a flat plane, surfacing with or without end matching and working.
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Lumber for Dimension | The National Dimension Manufacturers Associated defines both hardwood and softwood dimension components as being cut to a specific size from kiln-dried rough lumber, cants, or logs. |
Lumber Tally | A record of lumber giving the number of boards or pieces by width, thickness, length, grade and species. |
Lumber-Core Plywood | Plywood where thin sheets of veneer are glued to a core of narrow boards. Lumber-core plywood differs from regular plywood in that regular plywood is made up of successive layers of alternating grain veneer. |
Lumberjack | One who works in forest performing a variety of jobs related to the harvesting of timber; most commonly used in the Northeastern United States and eastern Canada. Also known as a logger. |
Lumber Ruler | A tool resembling a ruler with a handle at one end and a hood at the other which is used to calculate the board footage of a piece of lumber. |
Lumber Tally | Record of lumber giving the number of boards or pieces by size, grade, and species; often expressed in MBF. |
Lumen | The cell cavity in wood anatomy. |
Woodipedia Index | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |