Why do timber merchants refer to their joinery grade timber as ‘unsorted’? Surely if they have selected the best timber for joinery purposes then they have ‘sorted’ out the good stuff? Or am I missing something here?
Yes makes sense! It's only for sawn N. European or Russian redwood as far as I know. Sorted at the Swedish/Russian sawmill, not by the dealer here. Other imports have different grading systemsThe explanation I had years ago from my Dad (to exactly the same question) was that the process of “sorting” started with extracting the least good timber, so that when you were left with “unsorted”, that was after taking out the least good grades up to a point as @Jelly has described. With that explanation the nonsensical description makes some sense!
I think this is consistent with the explanation Jelly has given of the grading process (and he is an expert and I am not).
Cheers
Yes makes sense! It's only for sawn N. European or Russian redwood as far as I know.
Jelly describes sorting the unsorted above. Whatever remains should then be down graded.
the biggest problem is one in five are resinous one in ten are saturated with it. show it a machine and its an instant clog. I had one and it was twice as heavy as the next . no paint would stick until it was cleaned with white spirit.
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