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Boring
Comments
Common Names
Common Uses
Countries of Distribution
Cutting Resistance
Distribution Overview
Drying Defects
Ease of Drying
Environmental Profile
Family Name
Gluing
Grain
Heartwood Color
Kiln Drying Rate
Kiln Schedules
Movement in Service
Nailing
Natural Durability
Numerical Data
Odor
Planing
Polishing
References
Regions of Distribution
Resistance to Abrasion
Response to Hand Tools
Sanding
Sapwood Color
Scientific Name
Screwing
Staining
Steam Bending
Texture
Trade Name
Tree Size
Turning
Veneering Qualities

Scientific Name
Lithocarpus densiflorus

Trade Name
Tanoak

Family Name
Fagaceae

Wood Image 1

Common Names
Tanoak

Regions of Distribution
North America

Countries of Distribution  [VIEW MAP]
United States

Common Uses
Baseball bats, Beams, Bedroom suites, Building materials, Cabinetmaking, Chairs, Chests, Concealed parts (Furniture), Core Stock, Decorative veneer, Desks, Dining-room furniture, Domestic flooring, Dowell pins, Dowells, Drawer sides, Factory construction, Figured veneer, Fine furniture, Floor lamps, Flooring, Fuelwood, Furniture , Furniture components, Furniture squares or stock, Hatracks, Interior construction, Interior trim, Joists, Kitchen cabinets, Living-room suites, Mine timbers, Moldings, Office furniture, Pallets, Parquet flooring, Plain veneer, Pulpwood, Structural work, Tannin, Veneer

Environmental Profile
Rather secure globally
Rather rare at the periphery of its range
Rare in parts of its natural range (population is at risk)
Generally widespread, secure, and abundant within most of its range
Data source is Nature Conservancy


Distribution Overview
A disjunct stand slightly north of the Umpqua River in southwestern Oregon has been reported as the northernmost limit of tanoak's natural range. The general northern limit of tanoak in the Coast Ranges, however, is farther south in the Coquille River drainage. Its eastern limit in Oregon extends from west of Roseburg to Grants Pass, and then southwesterly into the Applegate River drainage. Tanoak's range stretches southward through the Coast Ranges in California to the Santa Ynez Mountains north and east of Santa Barbara, CA. The range also extends northeastward from the Humboldt Bay region to the lower slopes of Mount Shasta, then intermittently southward along the western slopes of the Sierra Nevada as far as Mariposa County. In the Sierra Nevada, tanoak is most common between the Feather and American Rivers. Tanoak grows well on a variety of soils developed from igneous, metamorphic, or sedimentary rocks, or sedimentary rock alluvium. It grows best on soils that are deep, well-drained, and loamy, sandy, or gravelly. Tanoak also grows on soils derived from serpentine, which are intermediate between the moist and dry extremes, but is limited to a shrubby form. It is seldom found on heavy clayey soils.

Heartwood Color
The heartwood is described as light brown, tinged with red. The wood ages to a pleasing tannish or deep reddish brown

Sapwood Color
The wide sapwood is initially light reddish brown, but turns darker upon exposure and blends into the heartwood

Grain
Birds-eye (figure)
Interlocked


Texture
Medium
Coarse


Natural Durability
Very durable
Decay's readily

The wood is susceptible to attack by fungi, including Fistulina hepatica, Inonotus dryadeus, and Schizophyllum commune. It is also vulnerable to attack by insects, including Agrilus angelicus and Melalgus confertus.

Odor
No specific smell or taste


Kiln Schedules
3 - B1 (4/4); T3 - B1 (8/4) U


Drying Defects
Splitting
Checking


Uncontrolled drying conditions are reported to cause end and surface checks, and rapid drying rates tend to promote honeycomb and collapse. Adequate air circulation around lumber in the green condition is also essential in order to prevent bacterial stains and molds

Ease of Drying
Moderately Difficult to Difficult
Slowly
Requires careful seasoning to prevent degrade

Timber containing mineral streak is especially difficult to dry. Air-seasoning requires very mild conditions, with moderate temperatures and high humidities in order to prevent the development of molds and bacterial stains

Kiln Drying Rate
Naturally dries slowly


Tree Size
Sapwood width is 10-15 cm
Sapwood width is 5-10 cm


The evergreen tree is reported to reach a height of 50 to 150 feet (15 to 35 m), with a trunk diameter of 6 to 48 inches (15 to 120 cm). Trees growing in the forest are reported to develop narrow crowns, with straight boles that are clear of branches for 30 to 80 feet (9 to 24 m)

Comments
Generally heavy, hard and strong

The species has similar characteristics to both the true oaks and chestnut. The bark of the tree produces tannin in commercial quantities. Iron is reported to react with Tanoak lumber in the green condition to cause a pronounced blue-black discoloration in the wood

Boring
Excellent (95+ pieces out of 100 will yield excellent results)


Cutting Resistance
Fairly Difficult to Very Difficult to saw


Gluing
Fairly Easy to Very Easy
Fairly high bond strength

The wood glues satisfactorily under well-controlled conditions
Straight
Figure
Growth rings (figure)
Even
Variable (figure)
Rays (figure)
Other (figure)
Weak (figure)


Percent of moulded pieces with good to excellent results = 39

Movement in Service
The wood shows fair to poor stability in service, depending on heartwood content.

Nailing
Fairly Difficult to Very Difficult
Holds satisfactorily
High resistance to splitting during nailing
Difficult to nail


Planing
Machining qualities of Tanoak are comparable to or superior than those of the oaks, especially in planing, moulding, boring, and mortising. The wood is reported to plane well and can be worked to a smooth surface. (Percent of planed pieces without any machining defects = 80)

Resistance to Abrasion
Very good resistance to wear


Response to Hand Tools
Fairly Difficult to Difficult to Work


Sanding
Highly resistant to fuzzing
Fair sanding qualities


Screwing
Very high splitting resistance
Good screw holding properties
Difficult to screw


Turning
Good results

Number of pieces out of one hundred producing fair to excellent turning results = 81

Veneering Qualities
The timber is reported to produce good quality veneer that is suitable for furniture manufacture. Blocks heated to 160 degrees F (65 degrees C) are reported to yield smoother, tighter, and higher quality veneer without increasing amount of end splitting. Defects are reported to include surface checking, staining, and knots greater than 2 inches (5 cm). Veneers are reported to dry without difficulty

Steam Bending
Steam bending properties are rated as fair to poor

Polishing
High resistance to fuzzing


Staining
Fair to Good Results


Numerical Data
ItemGreenDryEnglish
Bending Strength1029017052psi
Density45lbs/ft3
Hardness1421lbs
Impact Strength43inches
Maximum Crushing Strength45577304.psi
Stiffness151922541000 psi
Work to Maximum Load13inch-lbs/in3
Specific Gravity0.580.62
Weight4436.lbs/ft3
Radial Shrinkage5%
Tangential Shrinkage11%
Volumetric Shrinkage15%
ItemGreenDryMetric
Bending Strength7231198kg/cm2
Density721kg/m3
Hardness644kg
Impact Strength109cm
Maximum Crushing Strength320513.kg/cm2
Stiffness1061581000 kg/cm2
Work to Maximum Load0.91cm-kg/cm3
Specific Gravity0.580.62
Weight705576.kg/m3
Radial Shrinkage5%
Tangential Shrinkage11%

References
Boone, R.S., C.J. Kozlik, P.J. Bois, E.M. Wengert. 1988. Dry Kiln Schedules for Commercial Hardwoods - Temperate and Tropical. USDA, Forest Service, General Technical Report FPL-GTR-57, Forest Products Laboratory, Madison, Wisconsin.

Burns, R.M. and B.H. Honkala. 1990. Silvics of North America, Vol. 2 - Hardwoods. Agriculture Handbook 654. United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Washington, D.C.

California Department of Forestry. Comparative Physical and Mechanical Properties of Western and Eastern Hardwoods. Prepared by Forest Products Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, California. N/d.

Kaiser, Jo-Ann. Wood of the Month: Tanoak - Northern California's 'Other' Important Tree. Wood & Wood Products, June, 1989. Page 58.

Little, E.L. 1980. The Audobon Society Field Guide to North American Trees - Western Region. Publishe by Arthur A. Knopf, New York.

Niemiec, S.S., G.A. Ahrens, S. Willits, and D.E. Hibbs. March, 1995. Hardwoods of the Pacific Northwest. Oregon State University, College of Forestry, Research Contribution 8, Forest Research Laboratory, Department of Forest Products, Corvallis, Oregon.

Panshin, A.J. and C. deZeeuw. Textbook of Wood Technology. McGraw-Hill Series in Forest Resources. McGraw-Hill Book Company, New York.

USDA. 1987. Wood Handbook : Wood as an Engineering Material. United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Agriculture Handbook No. 72. Forest Products Laboratory, Madison, Wisconsin.

USDA. 1988. Dry Kiln Operators Manual, Preliminary Copy. Forest Service, Forest Products Laboratory, Madison, Wisconsin.

Western Wood Products Association. 19__. Softwoods of the Western USA. Published and Distributed by Western Wood Products Association, Yeon Building, 522 SW Fifth Avenue, Portland, Oregon.