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lurker":1fc4yfe8 said:
try Whitmores
Quote via e-mail

Not been myself (keep meaning to) but Motownmartin thinks they are good.
I thought the service at Whitmores was very good.

I went with a friend who bought about 8 cubic feet of Iroko to make some windows for his new workshop.

He made an appointment via phone, when we got there someone came to collect us from the reception, asked what we required and then took us to the appropriate building, then got the guy with a fork lift who fetched a whole pallet and placed it in the sorting area, we then sorted through the wood to find the best pieces.

After that, I asked if I could look around, no problem he said, they had most hardwoods you can think of.

I managed to get a couple of pieces from the scrap bin quite cheaply.

Martin
 
Fascinating insights Scrit, as always, and very helpful to us hobbyists to understand how it all works and why........

Cheers, Paul. :D
 
I buy so little hardwood and each time I do I have one hell of a game trying to work out how much I need in CU FT. It still seems alchemy to me I am afraid. It is the cost of the stuff which puts me off, well most of my customers anyway. Hence the reason I usually make most of my projects in softwood. :(
 
"As an engineer I don't think you'd ever dare say that steel or plastics distributors should publish their price lists on the net, and from experience they don't"

Sorry to contradict but you can buy steel from the internet pre-priced so to speak and in small quantities with the postage included in the calculations (no idea about plastics mind) :)

One thing that confuses me as someone with no idea how wood yards work is that when you see pictures there's massive stacks of timber all over the place so how can the price vary so much week to week due to demand? I can understand variation in machined timber because the rough wood is so variable that wastage would be impossible to calculate. It's a pity that B&Q or some other shed couldn't see this thread and do some market research to see what the actual demand is for quality timber - with their buying power they could negotiate a good price and stock it in their bigger stores (ok so I'm dreaming :lol: )

As for thinking a merchant MAY be dishonest for not allowing you see what you're buying - yes, it's a perfectly valid scenario to think you're getting the crap the big customers don't want - if a car dealer said that he had 15 cars in stock but he was going to pick the one you wanted to buy would you accept that? However assuming you are allowed the time to examine what he picks and return any you think are below standard and get them replaced then fair enough.

As for discounts I'd agree big customers or regulars could get them but I wouldn't expect one if I didn't meet those criteria.

Wastage confuses me (like a lot of things - why is it called waney? For ages I thought someone couldn't spell wavey!) hopefully it'll get easier with time and experience.
 
Well, Interesting Timbers are certainly one company who give you a pre-VAT price per cubic foot on their website for 'Trade Timbers', although they also advise you contact them before hand.

http://www.interestingtimbers.co.uk/default.asp?categoryID=5&pageID=4

They also have a separate page for 'Hobby Timber'. And, apparently, they'll happily let you go through and pick out your own boards.


My nearest suppliers though, they advise I ask the price at the point of ordering as they are subject to change, mainly with hardwoods. I find that acceptable but at least Interesting Timbers give you a rough idea before you have a heart-attack, if you're new to it all, that is! :D
 
Kane":12w9gtnv said:
Sorry to contradict but you can buy steel from the internet pre-priced so to speak and in small quantities with the postage included in the calculations (no idea about plastics mind) :)
There's the rub, "postage included". with the greatest of respect this is a bit like quoting prices from the corner shop when you want to buy your groceries from Sainsbury's - and the prices bear about the same relationship. Having built the computer system for one large steel manufacturer in the 1970s I know the sorts of variation in section, finish (e.g. mill, scaled, pickled, dimension ground bright, etc) and so on that occurs - well enough to know that mail order steel suppliers are like the local DIY shop flogging PAR pine. In other words, extremely limited range of sizes and materials at premium prices. And a DIY shop isn't a timber merchant.

I've found that in general where merchants do publish stuff it's only from a very restricted list and the prices seem to err on the side of caution. I think Baco metal centres used to do this on ally profile, but they only ever quoted prices on the 100 or so most popular lines from about 3,000 and the price was always subject to quantity, availability, etc and so was never right - so it was generally easier to ring and ask.

The plastics comment is also from experience. You might get a price on the net for something simple like 4mm clear acrylic (which will be well out of trade affordability) but you'll probably never find a figure for 35mm UHMW polyethylene.

Kane":12w9gtnv said:
One thing that confuses me as someone with no idea how wood yards work is that when you see pictures there's massive stacks of timber all over the place so how can the price vary so much week to week due to demand?
Firstly, most hardwoods are air dried for the first part of the process of production at the rate of 1 year per inch thickness. Even if you accelerate by kilning there's still a finite amount of kiln capacity and it takes a set time to kiln a batch, so there will always need to be buffer stock between forest and end user. To sell air-dried 4in oak you need in effect at least 4 to 5 years worth of stock to meet on-goping demand, so only a certain percentage of that huge stack will ready and available at any time. Another thing to bear in mind is that if a big player like M&S decided to refit their shops in, say, Elm, the requirement for Elm would suddenly go up enormously as prices inevitably chased availability. This is a problem in all raw material/commodity markets and as I stated earlier, timber ain't soap, it's a raw material with (in some case) commodity market spot prices. To make things even worse in recent years the Chinese have complicated the market by coming in and buying up huge stocks of timber, including futures, which further depletes the availability of materials at fairly short notice.

I recall a number of years back that M&S and Boots, who were both undergoing major refit programs at the time, were using so much ash for show work that the price of joinery ash rocketed up from around £13 to £14/cube to nearly £30 for a while. Does that mean that merchants who had stock bought-in to make a profit at £14 should have continued to sell at that price when the market rose? Or that when the price collapsed, as it did a few years later when demand fell, they should have continued selling at the higher prices? In a capitalist world, I think not.

Kane":12w9gtnv said:
It's a pity that B&Q or some other shed couldn't see this thread and do some market research to see what the actual demand is for quality timber - with their buying power they could negotiate a good price and stock it in their bigger stores (ok so I'm dreaming :lol: )
You certainly are dreaming! Those muppets can't even deliver acceptable quality sawn pine without too many defects (hence the description "banana pine"). In any case their prices against timber yards are often a joke, even on small quantities. And the thought of someone at B&Q rip sawing down big boards :roll:

Kane":12w9gtnv said:
Wastage confuses me (like a lot of things - why is it called waney?
Why is a tenon called a tenon, or a cramp a cramp? It's just the traditional and correct terminology. Like most other things timber has it's own vocabulary (or jargon), just like cars or computers which neds to be learned to communicate with yards. If you are a car owner I presume you know some of the jargon to do with cars which is no doubt a help when dealing with garages. Why must timber be any different?

Scrit
 
Don't follow your postage included arguement - you buy say 150mm X 25mm X 4mm thick O1 steel and the price is shown and when you order on-line they calculate the delivery and display it - where's the problem with that?

The drying time explains the demand though - no way to rush a couple of ton of wood into a saleable condition.

The wastage comment was just that - once I get a grip on the terminology I'll be fine, but using obscure terminology to deliberately make something difficult is stupid.
 
Kane":ra2dbdv4 said:
Don't follow your postage included arguement - you buy say 150mm X 25mm X 4mm thick O1 steel and the price is shown and when you order on-line they calculate the delivery and display it - where's the problem with that?
That is still small-scale, limited range, hobby retail and the prices will doubtless be really high. I doubt you'd be able to buy Manganese 52, M42 dimension ground drill rod or ASP 30 that way (I worked for a steel manufacturer in the days of yore :roll: ). Engineering firms generally, in my experience, tend to be buying a lot more than you'd ever manage to pop in the post............. And if you wanted steel to make a gate I think you'd find posting it a might expensie. The point is that you're talking about limited-scale operations, just like the local DIY shop, with consequently limited ranges of stock. A "trade" steel stockist will carry and supply a huge range of stock and won't post the prices in the way you say - they'll also be much much cheaper in all probability.

Kane":ra2dbdv4 said:
The wastage comment was just that - once I get a grip on the terminology I'll be fine, but using obscure terminology to deliberately make something difficult is stupid.
Actually the terminology is not intended to make anything difficult. It is the technically correct way to refer to what any trained woodworker knows about buying timber, in other words it's jargon, or woodworker's shorthand if you'd rather. It's no more obscure than the terms mpg, rpm, bhp, 0 to 60 and twin ohc are to car buffs. Timber is a natural material and as such it is full of flaws, that's part of the challenge in working with hardwoods. Being a natural material it requires more comprehension than, say, MDF to make best use of it.

If you want soap, then buy soap. If you want timber sold like soap then buy B&Q "banana" pine in nice uniform, (theoretically) rectangular "sticks". The blandness (and "bananyness") will soon drive you nuts. Otherwise learn about what you're buying and things might just get a bit easier for you. If you seriously want to understand how wood works I'd suggest borrowing Prof. Bruce Hoadley's excellent "Understanding Wood: A Craftsman's Guide to Wood Technology" from your local library then you'll possibly begin to understand why it's difficult to package hardwoods like soap. And you may even learn enough to be able to make some informed buying decisions.

If it's any consolation buying timber stock is probably one of the moist frustrating parts of any furniture maker's life - including the professionals.

Scrit
 
Kane":2tu0se13 said:
using obscure terminology to deliberately make something difficult is stupid.

I agree with you Kane, but 'waney edge' isn't obscure terminology if that's the term you are bothered by. It is standard timber trade terminology understood by everyone from forester all through the chain to professional end user of wood.

Waney is of course derived from the word wane, meaning to decrease gradually in size. Used in conjunction with timber boards or planks it precisely identifies a defect, ie, a bevelled bark edge along with the normally undesirable phloem, cambium and living xylem underneath it.

As you say, if you stick with it and study the subject it becomes less of a mystery. Incidentally , I threw in the words phloem, cambium and xylem so that if you're unfamiliar with them it's an opportunity to learn something fundamental about wood. Slainte.
 
The waney edge was used as an example of MY ignorance (meant to be a bit tongue in cheek with the spelling mistake comment :))

The "small-scale, limited range, hobby retail" aspect is exactly the wood market we're discussing and the prices weren't that high for the steel (a tenner would have got enough O1 for several knife blades for example - mind that may be expensive compared to the prices for massive quantities) but you have to acknowledge the annoyance for people new to the game who are advised to approach their local timber merchant and always pick their own timber when they're treated like something the dog dragged in, if merchants don't want our business then put up a sign saying trade only. I don't mind paying a higher price than the pros who put a lot of business into the yard and I expect to have to comply with the terms/measurements/jargon etc of the hobby I've choosen to pursue in the way that I did in the other things I've done.
 
Scrit, I'm not trying to make them change the way they do business. They just won't be doing business with me if I can't have a price list. I can buy wood from many places that don't believe they are still in the 19th century :wink: :lol:

I only looked at atkins on recomendation from someone
 
I managed a big hardware store in south africa and what Scrit says is very true, price varies according to supply and demand. I can tell you from experiance hardwood sales profits are not high, after ordering bulk, stacking, storing and customers picking the best, your left with 30% scrap easy.
But saying all that the attitude of sales personal in some of theses suppliers here have cost there establishments a lot of my business.
Alex
 
Well,
Little did I know that when I posted my (what I thought was a relatively simple) question it would provoke the discussion that has taken place!
Can I thank everyone who has taken the trouble to reply especially Scrit, Kane and Matt for their very comprehensive inputs.
Your inputs have given me a much better insight into the ways of the Commercial Timber Suppliers and I now understand the reaction I have had when I enquire about ordering (just enough) hardwood to build, for example, a bed headboard. I must seem like a fly that is buzzing around being a nuisance when they are trying to cope with a swarm of bees!
On the other hand I have visited both Yandles and John Boddys (whilst on holiday) and for me they are the perfect place to purchase "hobby" quantities of Hardwood (the only problem is that they are both a 300+ mile round trip).
I guess that I will have to rely on the companies that are happy to supply Hardwood remotely to hobby users (like Interesting Timbers etc).

Martin.
 
Marting, apologies if i've already mentioned them, but have you tried EO Burtons in brentwood - it's where I go (amongst other places) and once i've explained i'm a hobbyist they are usually very helpful and will work out a price from your cutting list..
 
Byron,
Thanks for the tip.
I have driven past them (they are literally only 10 minutes away from my home) but only when they are closed as they are not open on Sat or Sun.
I will have to make a point of taking my cutting list along on a week day next time I need some Hardwood.
Good to know they are prepared to help a hobbyist.

Thanks again - Martin.
 
Martin - they are open on saturdays, It's when I always visit them, it may only be up to the afternoon as i've always been in there before noon. If you do speak to them on the phone, the two guy's whom i've had some excellent conversations with and had some good service from are: Hugh and Adrian.
 
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