THE ENGINEERED WOOD ASSOCIATION Be Constructive WOOD Wood Is the Right Choice for a Host of Construction Applications

THE ENGINEERED WOOD ASSOCIATION Be Constructive WOOD Wood Is the Right Choice for a Host of Construction Applications

ENGINEERED WOOD CONSTRUCTION GUIDE APA THE ENGINEERED WOOD ASSOCIATION Be Constructive WOOD Wood is the right choice for a host of construction applications. It is the earth’s natural, energy efficient and renewable building material. Engineered wood is a better use of wood. It uses less wood to make more wood products. That’s why using APA trademarked I-joists, glued laminated timbers, laminated veneer lumber, plywood and oriented strand board is constructive ... for the environment, for innovative design, and for strong, durable buildings. A few facts about wood. I We’re not running out of trees. One-third of the United States land base – 731 million acres – is covered by forests. About two-thirds of that 731 million acres is suitable for repeated planting and harvesting of timber. But only about half of the land suitable for growing timber is open to logging. Most of that harvestable acreage also is open to other uses, such as camping, hiking, and hunting. Forests fully cover one-half of Canada’s land mass. Of this forestland, nearly half is considered productive, or capable of producing timber on a sustained yield basis. Canada has the highest per capita accumulation of protected natural areas in the world – areas including national and provincial parks. I We’re growing more wood every day. American landowners plant more than two billion trees every year. In addition, millions of trees seed naturally. The forest products industry, which comprises about 15 percent of forestland ownership, is responsible for 41 percent of replanted forest acreage. That works out to more than one billion trees a year, or about three million trees planted every day. This high rate of replanting accounts for the fact that each year, 27 percent more timber is grown than is harvested. Canada’s replanting record shows a fourfold increase in the number of trees planted between 1975 and 1990. I Manufacturing wood is energy efficient. Percent of Percent of Wood products made up 47 percent of all Material Production Energy Use industrial raw materials manufactured in the Wood 47 4 United States, yet consumed only 4 percent of the energy needed to manufacture all Steel 23 48 industrial raw materials, according to Aluminum 2 8 a 1987 study. I Constructive news for a healthy planet. For every ton of wood grown, a young forest produces 1.07 tons of oxygen and absorbs 1.47 tons of carbon dioxide. • ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. • ANY COPYING, MODIFICATION, DISTRIBUTION OR OTHER USE OF THIS PUBLICATION OTHER THAN AS EXPRESSLY AUTHORIZED BY APA IS PROHIBITED BY THE U.S. COPYRIGHT LAWS. THE U.S. IS PROHIBITED BY APA BY AUTHORIZED THAN AS EXPRESSLY OTHER USE OF THIS PUBLICATION DISTRIBUTION OR OTHER MODIFICATION, • ANY COPYING, • ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Wood. It’s the constructive choice for NOTICE: the environment. The recommendations in A this guide apply only to AP panels that bear the APA THE ENGINEERED trademark. Only panels WOOD ASSOCIATION bearing the APA trademark RATED SHEATHING15/32 INCH are subject to the 32/16 Association’s quality SIZED FOR SPACING EXPOSURE 1 auditing program. 000 PS 1-95 C-D PRP-108 APA – THE ENGINEERED WOOD ASSOCIATION APA ©2001 PA engineered wood products are used in a wide range A of construction applications. Time-tested panel products are used in traditional wood-frame construction and in combination with other engineered wood products and systems. For low in-place cost, versatility, and superior performance, APA engineered wood systems are simply hard to beat. This guide from APA – The Engineered Wood Association is designed as a reference manual for engineered wood specifiers and users in both residential and commercial construction. It contains up-to-date information on APA Performance Rated Panels, glulam, I-joists, specification practices, floor, wall and roof systems, diaphragms and shear walls, fire-rated systems and methods of finishing. If what you want to know about engineered wood construction systems isn’t fully explained here, chances are it is in one of our many other publications. Simply write for the appropriate title or titles cited throughout this publication. Product and application information can also be found on the APA web site, at www.apawood.org. Or, for individual assistance with specific design questions or problems, contact the APA Product Support Help Desk or the nearest APA regional field office listed on the back cover. GUIDE TO ENGINEERED WOOD PRODUCTS CONTENTS GUIDE TO ENGINEERED WALL CONSTRUCTION . .38 WOOD PRODUCTS . .4 APA Sturd-I-Wall . .38 Product Selection, Specification, Product Selection, Specification, APA Panel and Lap Siding Over and Handling and Handling . .4 Nailable Sheathing . .40 APA Panel Wall Sheathing . .42 The evolution of engineered wood PANEL SELECTION AND The Code Plus Wall . .43 products over the past few decades SPECIFICATION . .5 APA Sheathing Under Stucco . .44 Manufacturing and Siding Joint Details . .44 has greatly expanded building options Performance Standards . .5 APA Rated Siding Patterns Grade Designations . .5 and Grades . .46 and methods in all forms of residential Sanded, Unsanded and Finishing Plywood for and commercial construction. The Touch-Sanded Panels . .5 Exterior Exposure . .46 Bond Classificiation . .6 Interior Paneling . .49 next 21 pages of this APA Design/ Group Number . .6 Panel Backing . .49 Span Ratings . .11 APA Panel Shear Walls . .50 Construction guide provide product How To Order APA Panels . .11 information and specification recom- Grade Availability . .12 ROOF CONSTRUCTION . .52 Metric Conversions . .12 APA Panel Roof Sheathing . .52 mendations for several of the most Panel Specification Guide . .12 The Code Plus Roof . .52 Panel Storage and Handling . .17 Preframed Roof Panels . .54 common engineered wood products – Long Span Systems . .56 plywood, oriented strand board, GLULAM SELECTION AND Plywood Under Special Coatings . .56 SPECIFICATION . .18 APA Panel Soffits . .57 composite panels, glulam, and I-joists. Balanced and Unbalanced Beams . .18 APA Panel Roof Diaphragms . .59 Other engineered wood products that Allowable Design Properties . .18 Sizes . .18 BUILDING REQUIREMENTS AND are often used in the construction Appearance Classification . .18 RELATED PANEL SYSTEMS . .61 Section Properties and Capacities . .19 Fire-resistant Construction . .61 systems described in this guide include Camber . .19 Wind-resistive Roofs . .64 rim board and laminated veneer Trademarks and Acceptances . .20 Noise Transmission Control . .65 Specification Guide for Energy Conservation . .67 lumber (LVL). Structural Glued Laminated Condensation: Its Cause and Control . .68 Timber (Glulam) . .20 Thermal Resistance of “Engineered wood” describes wood Glulam Beam Storage Wood Structural Panels . .69 and Handling . .21 products that are engineered for struc- RELATED PANEL SYSTEMS . .69 tural applications. Having been used I-JOISTS SELECTION AND The Permanent Wood Foundation . .69 SPECIFICATION . .22 Plywood for Outdoor Decks . .69 since the 1940s, plywood is considered APA PRI-400 . .22 Plywood for Concrete Forming . .69 Residential Floor Spans . .22 Structural Insulated Panels . .70 by many to be the original engineered Specifying APA Performance APA Panels Over Metal Framing . .70 wood product. All glued engineered Rated I-Joists . .23 APA Panel Systems I-Joist Storage and Handling . .25 Over Concrete Slabs . .71 wood products are made by combin- Special Floor Surfacing . .71 FLOOR CONSTRUCTION . .26 ing wood strands, veneers, lumber or APA Rated Sturd-I-Floor . .26 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION . .71 other wood fiber with glue to form a The Code Plus Floor . .29 About APA – The Engineered Wood Sturd-I-Floor 32 oc and 48 oc . .29 Association and Engineered large composite structural unit. They APA Performance Rated Rim Board . .29 Wood Systems . .71 are designed and manufactured to The APA Glued Floor System . .30 APA Panel Subflooring . .32 maximize the natural strength and Lightweight Concrete Over APA Panels . .33 stiffness characteristics of wood by APA Plywood Underlayment . .33 orienting the wood veneers, strands or Hardwood Flooring Over APA Panel Subfloors . .34 laminations and by combining wood Ceramic Tile Over APA Plywood Floors . .35 with durable adhesives. APA Panel Stair Treads and Risers . .36 Heavy Duty Plywood Floors . .36 PANEL SELECTION AND SPECIFICATION Manufacturing and veneer species and thickness, etc., are in Performance Standards many instances identical to panel grades TABLE 1 Panels for construction and industrial as defined in Product Standard PS 1-95. VENEER GRADES applications can be manufactured Smooth, paintable. Not more than Typical APA Performance Rated Panel 18 neatly made repairs, boat, in a variety of ways – as plywood sled, or router type, and parallel to trademarks are illustrated and explained A (cross-laminated wood veneer), as grain, permitted. Wood or syn- on page 6. thetic repairs permitted. May be composite panels (veneer faces bonded used for natural finish in less demanding applications. to wood strand cores), or as oriented Grade Designations Solid surface. Shims, sled or router strand board (OSB). repairs, and tight knots to 1 inch Structural panel grades are generally B across grain permitted. Wood or synthetic repairs permitted. Some Some plywood panels are manufactured identified in terms of the veneer grade minor splits permitted. under the detailed manufacturing speci- used on the face and back of the panel Improved C veneer with splits lim- (e.g., A-B, B-C, etc.), or by a name sug- ited to 1/8-inch width and knot- fications or under the performance test- C holes or other open defects limited gesting the panel’s intended end use Plugged to 1/4 x 1/2 inch. Wood or syn- ing provisions of Voluntary Product thetic repairs permitted. Admits Standard PS 1-95 for Construction and (e.g., APA RATED SHEATHING, APA some broken grain. Tight knots to 1-1/2 inch. Industrial Plywood, developed coopera- RATED STURD-I-FLOOR, etc.). See Knotholes to 1 inch across grain Tables 2-4. C and some to 1-1/2 inch if total tively by the plywood industry and the width of knots and knotholes is U.S.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    72 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us