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Hardwood Floor Species Information

This section can be your references to build the perfect hardwood floors for your home. Some solid hardwoods may be susceptible to extreme conditions, In this case you can see our guide about Solid vs Enginered Hardwood Floors or Janka Hardness Scale test for hardwood flooring species.

African PadaukCarribean Heart PineKempasSantos Mahogany
Afzelia / DoussieCedarLacewoodSapele / Sapelli
AmendoimChestnutLarchSatinwood
American BeechCocoboloLeopardwoodShedua
AndirobaCoffee BeanLocustSouthern Yellow Pine
Angelim PedraCorkMakoreSouthern Yellow Pine (Longleaf)
Ash (White)CottonwoodMerbau Spotted Gum
Australian CypressCumaru / Brazilian TeakMesquite Sweet Birch
BangkiraiCurupixaMindiSycamore
BasswoodDouglas FirMovinguiSydney Blue Gum
Black CherryEastern White PineNatural Bamboo*Tallowwood
Black WalnutEbonyPaper BirchTasmanian Oak
BlackwoodEucalyptus / Rose GumParana PineTeak
BloodwoodHard Maple / Sugar MaplePerobaTigerwood
BocoteHeart PinePradooTimborana
BoireHemlockPurpleheartTrue Pine
BorealHickory and PecanRed MahoganyTualang
Brazilian Cherry / JatobaHighland BeechRed Oak (Northern)Turpentine
BrushboxImbuiaRed PineWenge
BubingaIpe / Walnut / LapachoRedwood / ParajuWhite Oak
CabreuvaJarrahRibbon GumWhite Pine
CameronKambala / IrokoRosewoodYellow Birch
Carbonized Bamboo*KarriSakuraZebrawood
*) represent one spesies.
(Some items available soon)

Do It Yourself Guide

Why hire a contractor if you can do it by yourself? It's can be fun and rewarding. However, a factor of time and high risk of human error but less money to spend is the things you must consider first. In some difficult projects be sure your knowledge and experiences are capable enough to handle it.
 
  • Introduction
  •  
  • About DIY Installation
  •  
  • Recommended Tools
  •  
  • Installing Carpet to Hardwood Floor
  •  
  • Removing Stains and Odors Pets in Hardwood Floors
  •  
  • Removing Glued HF's on Concrete
  •  
  • Dust Control
  •  
  • Refinishing Floors
  •  
  • Fixing Squeak and Cracks
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    Zebrawood



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    Scientific name:
    Microberlinia brazzavillensis

    Other names:
    Allen ele
    Amouk
    African zebrawood
    Allen ele
    Enuk-enug
    Izingana
    Zebrano
    Zingana

    zebrawood-tree zebrawood-product zebrawood-floor

    This species is reported to be relatively abundant, with little or no threat to its population within its natural growth range. Trunk diameters are reported to be about 48 to 60 inches (120 to 150 cm). The trees commonly have very thick barks, which are transferred at felling sites. The trees are reported to be hard to harvest because they could grow to very large sizes and are frequently located in inaccessible areas. Harvesting difficulties and the need for quarter sawing, rather than the more economical plain sawing, are reported to add to the overall cost of the timber.

    Weight:
    Basic specific gravity (ovendry weight/green volume) about 0.70; air-dry density 53 pcf.

    Use:
    Decorative veneers, turnery. Because of high toughness, used in ski manufacture, tool handles, etc.

    General characteristic:
    Heartwood pale yellow brown with narrow darker streaks, striping pattern varies considerably; sapwood white up to 4 in. wide, distinct. Texture medium to coarse; grain usually wavy or interlocked; lustrous; unpleasant odor disappears after drying.

    Working properties:
    Saws moderately well, a clean smooth finish is occasionally hard to obtain with machine or hand planing, tearing of interlocked grain; effective gluing properties, veneers need careful handling to avoid cracking.

    Drying and shrinkage:
    Difficult to season without warping, should be quarter sawn to minimize degrade. Kiln schedule T2-C2 is suggested for 4/4 stock and T2-C1 for 8/4. Shrinkage green to oven dry: radial 6.8%; tangential 1.5% volumetric 16.5%

    Durability:
    The wood is reported to be resistant to termites, but is susceptible to occasional pinhole borer attack. The heartwood is reported to be extremely resistant to preservative treatment. The sapwood is treatable. Heartwood is long-lived and resistant to termite attack; sapwood permeable.

    Index you maybe interesting in reading: Janka Hardness Hardwood Floor Scale

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