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Plywood

Plywood was the first type of engineered wood[?] to be invented. It is made from thin sheets of wood veneer[?], called plys, which are stacked together with the direction of each ply's grain differing from its neighbors by 90°. The plys are bonded under heat and pressure with strong adhesives, making plywood a type of composite material. A vast number of varieties of plywood exist, tailored for all manner of conditions and uses. Plywood production requires a good log, called a peeler, generally straighter and larger in diameter than that required for processing by a sawmill[?]. The log is peeled into sheets of veneer which are then cut to the desired dimensions, dried, patched and glued together to form the plywood panel. The panel can then patched, resized, sanded or otherwise refinished, depending on the market it was intended to be sold in. The most common varieties of plywood comes in three, five or seven plys with dimensions of 1.2 m x 2.4 m (4 feet x 8 feet).

History

Plywood has be made for thousands of years; the earliest known occurrence of plywood was in ancient Egypt around 3500 BC when wooden articles were made from sawn veneers glued together crosswise. This was originally done due to a shortage of fine wood; thin sheets of high-quality wood were glued over a substrate of lower-quality wood for cosmetic effect, with the structural benefits arising only incidentally. This manner of inventing plywood has occurred repeatedly throughout history; for example, many of the great English furniture makers such as Sheridan used veneer as a raw material.

Modern plywood in which the veneer are cut on a rotary lathe from softwood logs is of relatively recent origin, invented by Emmanuel Nobel[?] (the father of the more-famous Alfred Nobel). The first such lathes were set up in the United States in the mid 19th century. Plywood has been one of the most ubiquitous building products for decades.



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