Veneer Oak Stone Rough Cut

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Wood speciesOak Stone Rough Cut
Bot. NameQuercus spp.
Tradename EnStone Oak Rough Cut quarter
Type Deciduous tree
Price
Color Grey
Thickness 0.6 mm
Wood Structure Quarter Cut
SurfaceRough
TreatmentStone
Country of harvestEurope
Usages Interior, Furniture, Door
Certification available as FSC 100% & FSC-CW
NoteFor veneers with a rough cut structure, we strongly recommend using a white glue.
If there is partial glue penetration, it can be brushed out at right angles to the grain after pressing. We recommend to veneer a few samples in advance to get a feeling for the ratio of glue application and pressing pressure.

In the stone process, the color change is achieved by means of a tannin/iron reaction. The color tone cannot be controlled exactly, as this is a natural reaction, similar to smoking.

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Detailed Description

In favourable locations it grows to 50 m high with diameters up to 200 cm, but usually shorter and weaker. The shaft is well grown throughout, often twisted and knotless up to 15 m. The bark is thick, deeply cracked lengthwise and dark grey. The tree reaches a high age of several hundred years.

Tradenames and other names

Bot. Name: Quercus spp.

Tradename De: Eiche Stone sägeroh schlicht

Tradename En: Stone Oak Rough Cut quarter

Properties

Raw density: 430 - 960 Kg/m3

Occurrence

The oak is spread almost all over Europe, namely in Norway up to 63 degrees northern latitude and in Russia up to 57 degrees northern latitude, as in the Caucasus and in Asia Minor, furthermore in the south up to central Spain, Sicily and also on Crete oak is found.

Characteristic and wood color

Sapwood and heartwood are sharply separated. The sapwood is generally narrow and yellowish-white. As it is not weather-resistant, it has no economic significance and is removed before processing. The heartwood is greyish-yellow when freshly cut, later darkening to light to dark brown when exposed to air. Annual rings and growth zones are not clearly visible. The pores form an uninterrupted transverse zone in the early wood of the annual rings. Medullary rays broad and very clearly visible. They form unevenly sized and differently shaped "mirrors" in the quarter section, which are characteristic of oak. The structure varies according to location and age, usually straight to twisted, the texture also varies from fine to coarse.