| Title | Publication | Publish Year |
|---|---|---|
|
Preservation and Packing of Automotive Vehicles and Components for Export Shipment
Preparation of boxed vehicles for export includes coating parts subject to corrosion, removal of fuel and coolant, removal of projects parts, and providing for proper ventilation in the vehicle. Care […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1954 |
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Preservation of Particleboard and Hardboard with Pentachlorophenol
Three methods of preserving composition board were attempted in the laboratory: 1) spraying the processed wood chips with aqueous sodium pentachlorophenate just prior to adding the adhesive, 2) adding pentachlorophenol […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1958 |
|
Preservative Action of Bound Copper and Zinc
Lower retentions of copper and zinc are needed to protect wood from decay when these metals are supplied as sulfates or chlorides than when copper or zinc acetates are used. […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1961 |
| Hardwood Symposium Proceedings | 1987 | |
|
Preservative loss from stakes treated with ammoniacal copper borate
Southern pine stakes were pressure treated with ammoniacal copper borate and buried vertically to one half their length for 11 years at the Harrison Experimental Forest in Saucier, Miss. Chemical […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1991 |
|
Preservative Moisture-Repellent Treatments for Wooden Packing Boxes
In a test of the effectiveness of dip treatment of wooden packing boxes, 3,000 M22 small arms ammunition shipping boxes, made primarily from eastern white pine, but including some aspen, […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1959 |
|
Preservative Penetration Variations in Hickory
Nine mockernut hickory trees (Carya tomentosa Nutt.) at least 13 inches d.b.h., with specific gravities from 0.67 to 0.75 and growth rates of 15 to 24 rings per inch, were […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1966 |
|
Preservative treatment and field test monitoring of spruce pole stock: pressure and diffusible chemical treatments
One hundred and forty-four spruce (test species) and southern yellow pine (reference species) poles were variously treated by center boring, incising, or kerfing, followed by pressure treatment with chromated copper […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1991 |
|
Preservative Treatment Effects on Mechanical and Thickness Swelling Properties of Aspen Waferboard
Eighteen liquid or powdered phenolic resole resin-bonded types of aspen (Populus tremuloides) waferboard were manufactured incorporating eight commercially manufactured and one experimental preservative. Preservatives were applied by pretreating wafers, incorporating […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1982 |
|
Preservative treatment evaluation of five Appalachian hardwoods at two moisture contents
Better documentation of the treatability of Appalachian hardwoods may lead to improved utilization of species such as beech and hickory and the lower grades of other more widely used species. […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1998 |
|
Preservative treatment evaluation of red maple and yellow-poplar with ACQ-B
This project sought to determine if there was a difference in treatment results of selected refractory hardwood species by comparing a heated solution of ammoniacal copper quaternary compound-Type B (ACQ-B) […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1997 |
|
Preservative Treatment of Northern Post Species
A study of the use of 10 percent pentachlorophenol in grease applied to Michigan woods was part of a research project investigating groundline treatment of posts. Investigated variables included species–northern […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1962 |
|
Preservative treatment of plywood panels from the Pacific Northwest
The effect of panel source on treatability by preservatives was investigated by treating panels obtained from 37 manufacturers in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana with chromated copper arsenate type C […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1991 |
|
Preservative Treatment of Posts with Dry Chemicals
Post-size pieces of jack pine, American elm, and aspen were used in this study of the application of dry chemical to a moist wood surface as one method of preserving […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1964 |
|
Preservative treatment of red maple
The development of additional preservative treatments for underutilized eastern hardwoods, such as red maple, is critical to the development of new market opportunities that require long-term utilization of hardwoods in […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1996 |
|
Preservative treatment of Scots pine and Norway spruce
The ability to treat Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) and Norway spruce (Picea abies) with oilborne copper-8-quinolinolate or with waterborne chromated copper arsenate, ammoniacal copper zinc arsenate, or ammoniacal copper quaternary […]
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Forest Products Journal | 2004 |
|
Preserving Lumber in Storage
In climates similar to that at Ogden, Utah, initially air-dry lumber can be safely stored outside in bulk bundles indefinitely without the need of preservative treatment. In climates similar to […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1959 |
|
Pressure Band for Sap Displacement of Freshly Felled Trees Using Waterborne Preservatives
A light-weight pressure band for the sap-displacement of freshly felled timber is described. Sap was displaced from a 2m length of freshly felled Sitka spruce, using copper-chrome-arsenate preservative, in 15 […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1976 |
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Pressure of Competing Materials: Why Some Wood Products Hold Their Own
The progress of the wood preservation industry since its inception in 1885 is discussed. The use of wood preservatives has greatly extended the life of many products and prevented the […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1959 |
|
Pressure Treatment Can Extend Uses for Native Hardwoods
Some native hardwoods have been neglected in the past. However it has been shown that both American elm and cottonwood can be manufactured into valuable products. Pressure-treated American elm has […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1959 |
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Pressure treatment of a partially seasoned domestic hardwood with a polyborate
This note describes our experience with pressure treatment of steam-conditioned yellow-poplar (Liriodendron tulipifera) with a polyborate. This exploratory research made a pilot trial determination of the treatability of green yellow-poplar […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1988 |
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Pressure treatment of Sitka spruce lumber with ammoniacal copper zinc arsenate or chromated copper arsenate
Air-seasoned Sitka spruce was treated with ammoniacal copper zinc arsenate (ACZA) or chromated copper arsenate (CCA) at 11 commercial plants. Preservative retention and penetration were greater with ACZA treatments. All […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1993 |
| Hardwood Symposium Proceedings | 1987 | |
|
Prevention of Fungal Stain on Pine Lumber – Lab Screening Tests with Fungicides
A series of chemicals, some of which are modern agricultural fungicides, were screened in laboratory tests to identify efficient sapstain preventives of low mammalian toxicity. Two compounds, Captan and Folpet, […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1976 |
|
Prevention of non-microbial sapstains in southern hardwoods
A series of field tests demonstrated that non-microbial sapstains in hardwoods could be prevented by dipping lumber from freshly cut logs in formulations containing either 5 or 10 percent sodium […]
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Forest Products Journal | 1992 |