Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast
Results 16 to 30 of 31

Thread: Lumberyard Board Foot Mystery

  1. #16
    Yonak,

    Good point. I don't have any experience with the Atlanta suppliers. Maybe that is why people drive down and buy lumber from me.

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Courtenay BC Canada
    Posts
    2,750
    Measuring to the next inch is the norm .. A 7.5" Wide board is 8" .. A 3.25" Wide board is 4" ..

    At the retail level, they don't generally charge a green size or dry size.. but a sawmill will charge the retailer that way..

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    New Hampshire
    Posts
    2,797
    I asked a similar question to this years ago, so I'm sure if you search through the archives you will find it.

    I turns out the actual measure and selling standard (USDA reg) for hardwoods says to round up to the nearest inch in width or foot in length and then round the resulting number up to the nearest board foot. So you boards are 6, 7, 8, 6, 9, and 8 inches wide. Being 120 inches or 10 feet long doesn't have an effect. The bdft calculates to 5, 5.83, 6.67, 5, 7.5, and 6.67 which becomes 5, 6, 7, 5, 8, and 7 for a total of 38 board feet. I can get 38 but not 55. Someone is definitely not reading the rules...

    P.S. There are different rules for softwood and hardwood.

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    New England, in a town on the way to nowhere
    Posts
    539
    Quote Originally Posted by Anthony Whitesell View Post
    I asked a similar question to this years ago, so I'm sure if you search through the archives you will find it.

    I turns out the actual measure and selling standard (USDA reg) for hardwoods says to round up to the nearest inch in width or foot in length and then round the resulting number up to the nearest board foot. So you boards are 6, 7, 8, 6, 9, and 8 inches wide. Being 120 inches or 10 feet long doesn't have an effect. The bdft calculates to 5, 5.83, 6.67, 5, 7.5, and 6.67 which becomes 5, 6, 7, 5, 8, and 7 for a total of 38 board feet. I can get 38 but not 55. Someone is definitely not reading the rules...

    P.S. There are different rules for softwood and hardwood.
    This ^^^ is also how I'm used to measuring and paying for my hardwoods( but I still don't count bark ). My small quantity supplier- one who sells 10 or 1,000 bd ft per order- doesn't differentiate between hard and softwoods pricing rules when buying under 250 ft.
    Always ask what unit of measure they are quoting when asking prices over the phone- is that bd ft, lineal ft for a 1x6(was given this one once) and what quantity is the phone quote based on, at what footage does the price change. More often than not, the quote is per 1,000 board feet, in a banded unit, to a resaler. Your price will be higher.
    Another thing is etiquette- Don't mark up the wood with a pencil or crayon, or carve chunks out of the lumber to see the grain, or leave the stack in a mess. Do that and expect to pay .50 more a foot. Just sayin...

    And the OP still got gaffed IMO.

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Hatfield, AR
    Posts
    1,170
    I order S3S 1" material. Comes in at 13/16. For short boards (96"), they are allowed 7% error in measuring - the 7% has NEVER been in my favor. For long boards they allow 10% error. Again, I've never been on the receiving end of either of those percentages.

    I calculate for the shortages and order 30% more than needed for doors/FF material. That allows for their percentage plus material prep waist. I complained about it years ago and they brought out a book on mill industry standards. Was it legit? I have no idea. If the project is big, I just order S4S door and FF material because their Wienig molder gives me almost perfect stock to take straight to the chop saw.
    -Lud

  6. #21
    1) your numbers suggest that you need to take your receipt back to them and argue that someone made a mistake and they owe you some money - probably around 17 board ft worth.

    2) in general.. what you need to do is establish a mutual trust relationship with key suppliers - but be aware that most lumber yards need to sell by the pallet, not by the board, if they want to stay in business. To accommodate that, work with their people: come when they're not busy, be insanely patient about special orders, don't leave the stack a mess after picking out the boards you want, refer a few bigger customers to them if you can, etc. After a while you'll be a prefered customer they bend over backwards to serve, even though you buy very little from them.

  7. #22
    I would have looked at the numbers for review and asked the salesperson on the spot, there is clearly some sort of mistake here (or a very big communication problem). I don't know why people don't look for their solutions with the source of their problem but rather go online to ask strangers who can't possibly resolve their issue. Of course asking a question about shrinkage or lumber scaling would be an entirely different affair at least to me.

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Lexington, KY
    Posts
    283
    I've never seen all these variable pricing models before. I've only ever been to one commercial reseller, and three local sawyers, so my experience is limited, but... I go in and ask "do you have any 4/4 walnut?" They say yeah it's over there, $4 a bd/ft. I gather the boards I want, and normally they lay them all flat, side by side and take one width measurement. Length is always a standard 8 feet. Say the width is 24 inches, then 24 * 96 / 144 = 16 bd feet.

    if the board is in fair to poor condition many times they charge me half price for it.

    The commercial yards 4/4 is of course less than 1in thick, but some of the local sawyers will cut their 4/4 a bit fat, to ensure you get full use out of the board.

    some sawyers charge extra for greater than 4/4 thickness, some don't and the $/ft is the same

  9. #24
    I have to charge more for the thicker lumber. For example, it takes 2.5 times longer to dry a 8/4 board than a 4/4 board. It adds to the cost of drying, and there is more loss to degrade as thicker lumber is harder to dry without splitting, checking, or drying stress because the shell dries faster than the core, so you have to go slower to control that relationship. Still, the pricing of the lumber should be for what is in the final measured board, as is.

    At the lumberyard, a finished framing 2x4 is not a 2x4, it is actually a 1.5 x 3.5. So a 2x4 measured at the lumberyard that is 8 feet long is sold as 5.33 board feet. It is actually 3.5 board feet surface measure. That is a big difference. I sell 6/4 hardwood that is 1.5" thick x 3.5" wide by 8' long as 3.5 board feet, not 5.33 board feet. Big difference.

    If I have a tapered board, I average the wide from 3 measurements. In the middle and a third of the way from each end. I believe that is fair. Unless you are a wholesaler, the market for most hardwood lumber is for dry lumber, not green. It does not matter what the volume was green, it only matters in what the finished volume is, and that is how the lumber should be measured in my opinion, and that is the way that I do it.

  10. #25
    Did they charge you for 6/4? That would come out to about $52-$55.

    Or maybe they just counted wrong and double charged you for 2 of the boards.

    My vote is that they made a mistake; Hope you're taking it back to them for fixing.

  11. #26
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Location
    Bakerton WV
    Posts
    259
    The way I think about it is this, it starts in the forest with a guy scaling standing timber, there are different scales for estimating the volume. Logs are harvested and sold to mills on an estimated board foot yield scaling again. Timber is sawn into rough lumber where a 2 x 4 is close actual inch size. At that point actual board footage is known. Drying and milling to finish size takes place but the board footage remains throughout the wholesale to retail process. the board foot accounting should be consistent, from input to output less culls. Depending on facts about your lumber order, it is very possible that your order represents 50 bdft or so of resource. So from what I know, I think your case for complaint may be weak. So be on your toes at the sales counter, be ready to haggle a little but remember lumber is bought and sold in units of thousand board feet, your volume puts you in a weak position.

  12. #27
    Quote Originally Posted by Yonak Hawkins View Post
    It looks like you have a lumber yard like the ones we have here in Atlanta. They use the "magic stick" to justify cheating their customers. Even when you show them by real math their calculation is wrong they won't back down. You either have to pay or unload your truck and leave without what is required for the job and they know it. That's why I try to only deal with local sawyers. At least they're honest.
    Are you taking about peach? I'm in Atlanta as well.

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    New Hampshire
    Posts
    2,797
    Quote Originally Posted by Roger Nair View Post
    The way I think about it is this, it starts in the forest with a guy scaling standing timber, there are different scales for estimating the volume. Logs are harvested and sold to mills on an estimated board foot yield scaling again. Timber is sawn into rough lumber where a 2 x 4 is close actual inch size. At that point actual board footage is known. Drying and milling to finish size takes place but the board footage remains throughout the wholesale to retail process. the board foot accounting should be consistent, from input to output less culls. Depending on facts about your lumber order, it is very possible that your order represents 50 bdft or so of resource. So from what I know, I think your case for complaint may be weak. So be on your toes at the sales counter, be ready to haggle a little but remember lumber is bought and sold in units of thousand board feet, your volume puts you in a weak position.
    There are three standard scales for estimating the board feet possible in a log (Doyle, Scribner, and 1/4 International). Possible. The sawyer and the logger strike a deal on price based on quality and estimated board feet. It is up to the sawyer to set the logs in the mill to achieve or exceed that estimate. There is a difference between using a circular mill and a bandmill (typically the band mill runs a thinner kerf, therefore less loss and more bdft from the log is possible). If the sawyer exceeds the estimate and the price he paid, then he is in the money, but it still cost him time and money to make the extra bdft. When this lumber goes to market the sawyer and the retailer strike a price based on the board feet in the stack, not what was estimated in the log. The sawyer will take any loss (such as a rotten log that was unusable but paid for) into account when stating his asking price, but the reseller will be concerned with they price they can sell at and what is in the stack, but the unusable log laying off to the side. When the reseller marks the lumber, there a rules (laws and regulation) that must be followed.

    When cutting to the quarter scale, there is only one quarter scale. Where a rough board labelled 4/4 is nominally 1 1/8" thick and 4/4 planed is 3/4" thick. Dimensional lumber is not cut on the quarter scale, hence the 2x4 you buy planed and finished is only 1 1/2 x 3 1/2 (or slightly larger). This is about the same loss in thickness as 4/4 rough vs. planed.

    The NHLA provides all the guidelines necessary for the sawyer and reseller to measure and tally the board foot of lumber. In no way can I interpret the NHLA book to get the OP list up to 50+ bdft.

  14. #29
    Join Date
    Sep 2013
    Location
    Carrollton, Georgia
    Posts
    1,815
    Danny, thank you for employing the honest, straight-forward method of selling lumber that the average consumer can understand. It seems like the commercial lumber yards try to make it as confusing as possible in order to take advantage of a less-than-knowledgeable consumer by using methods that were developed for selling in large quantities to large operations such as commercial furniture mills, etc. State regulations in every state are on the side of the small consumer, us. They base their regulations on the NIST Handbook, which says :

    "2.12.4.1. Sales of Random Width Hardwood Lumber. – Sales of random width hardwood lumber measured after kiln drying shall be quoted, invoiced, and delivered on the basis of net board footage with no addition of footage for kiln drying, shrinkage or surfacing. Sales of hardwood lumber measured and sold prior to kiln drying or surfacing shall be quoted, invoiced, and delivered on the basis of net board footage before kiln drying or surfacing. If the lumber is to be kiln dried or surfaced at the request of the purchaser, the kiln drying or surfacing charge shall be clearly shown and identified on the quotation and invoice. (Amended 1993)"

    A seller can charge whatever they want to charge but their price must be clear, understandable and standardized with all other sellers of the same product. Many commercial lumber yards do not follow these regulations and, in my opinion, they should be called to account. Every time I am given a quote based gross calculations I inform the seller of the regulations. Usually they claim they did not know about them because this is "the way they've always done it." They're a registered commercial business, they're operating counter to their state regulations, and they don't even know it.

    Danny, how do you do the calculation that was addressed earlier : When the board dimension is fractional, such as 6-1/4" wide or 8-1/2' long, do you round off or calculate at the fractional dimension ?

  15. #30
    I use the exact measurements. No rounding.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •