An Introduction To Wood Species, Part 10: Teak

wood-plainsawn-01.jpg

This Wood Species series of entries comes to us from guest writer Rob Wilkey, an Atlanta-based woodworker and industrial designer whose expertise is in small home goods, furniture, and large installations.


Well folks, we’ve arrived at the final installment of this series on commonly imported wood species. This week’s featured species:

0teak_header.jpg

Like many other popular imports, teak has several impostors. Its name is used to sell a number of other species such as ‘Brazilian Teak’ (Cumaru) and ‘African Teak’ (Afrormosia). Genuine teak, also called Burma Teak, consists of only one species: Tectona grandis. This wood grows naturally in the tropical regions north of the Indian Ocean, but is now cultivated on plantations in Asia, Africa and South America. In fact, naturally-occurring or ‘old-growth’ teak is very difficult to find nowadays as plantation teak has dominated the marketplace. While plantation-grown teak has the same working properties as natural teak, it tends to lack the deep coloration and beautiful grain patterns found on old-growth teak. One property that all kinds of teak possess, however, is an extremely high resistance to rot and decay, making it the lumber of choice where water exposure is an issue. Wooden boat decks are almost always constructed using teak planks.

0teak_1boat.jpg

Teak is easy to work, relatively lightweight, and suffers from minimal seasonal movement. With a Janka rating of 1000lbf, the wood is just hard enough to resist dents and scratches while still being easy to cut and shape. Teak is diffuse-porous with medium pores, and is usually straight-grained. All of these factors make the wood ideal for most woodworking processes, however it will not sand to a smooth surface due to the numerous open pores. Teak’s incredible decay resistance is mostly attributable to the wood’s high oil content which, oddly, has little negative effect on gluing the wood. While other woods share teak’s high decay resistance, few are as abundant, workable, and lightweight as teak. The low weight of teak is especially important for its use on outdoor furniture. The weight difference between teak and other weatherproof woods, such as ipe, can mean a difference of several pounds on something as small as a dining chair.

(more…)

    



No Responses to “An Introduction To Wood Species, Part 10: Teak”

Post a Comment