2x2 lumber at Home Depot is now 1.28x1.28. Actual size is supposed to be 1.5

Blackout@kbin.run to Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world – 706 points –

I dont know why they have to lie about it. At $5/8ft board you'd think I paid for the full 1.5. Edit: I mixed up nominal with actual.

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A yellow pine 2x10 might move a tenth of an inch, not a full inch.

These were bought at the same time and are both 2x10 installed a couple days ago. You can even see the difference in the connection in the picture.

Over 3/8 of an inch and they both still need to dry.

I think if I was you I'd go have a talk with your sawyer, talk about "man if I wanted my wood this wet I wouldn't have broken up with Meagan. Is your kiln in working order?"

9-3/8 is spec, the hell you talking about?

You are just off on the amount that the wood can shrink from being rough sawn at 2” to final delivery. If one board came from a mill on a humid area, it would shrink less before milling meaning it will shrink more onsite, if the board comes from an arid region, it’s already shrunk lots before being milled. So won’t continue to shrink more.

This is the reason why you can’t predict the milled measurements and they use nominal sizes…. Not to mention the group is SPF, so it can be multiple species that shrink differently.

The difference between just basic book knowledge and actually using the material for a living mate.

Also, the hell is a sawyer? Wood comes from mills.

Okay, are we talking about "boards sold as 2x10s might vary in width from board to board?" Because I took you to mean that a given dried and milled 2x10 might move up to an inch, which it had better fucking not. Because yeah, the likes of Georgia Pacific are going to be a bit sloppy with the final dimensions of 2x10s, because it rarely matters that much for what that board is going to be used for.

I'm a woodworker, I buy rough sawn lumber dried over a period of months, I shop dry it for a couple weeks then mill it myself. I can predict with a fair degree of accuracy how much it will move.

A sawyer is an occupational term for a person who operates a sawmill. My sawyer's name is Bill.

A sawyer is an occupational term for a person who operates a sawmill.

Okay I just wanted to make sure you were talking out of your ass. Your mill and miller uses hand tools? Because that’s what a sawyer is dude…

Give it up. Yes a 2x10 can move 1/2 while drying, if you used them, you would know and understand this.

From Wikipedia:

Sawyer is an occupational term referring to someone who saws wood, particularly using a pitsaw either in a saw pit or with the log on trestles above ground or operates a sawmill.

Operator of a sawmill = sawyer.

A 2x10 can move a half inch while drying? Sure. It shouldn't be "while drying" while the construction crew is installing it.

Follow those wiki links, they all use hand tools, to use it to refer to one who operates machined mills instead of manual in a sawmill would be incorrect since there is already a term.

A miller operates a machined sawmill.

The word "Sawmill" from my quote was a link. This is the first picture on the page it links to. Hell of a hand tool that guy's using.

You're not only stupid, you're dishonest. I bet you vote Republican.

Yes the link that refers to SAWMILLS as a whole, where there can be millers who use the tools you linked, and sawyers who would use the tools used in the other links.

Who’s being dishonest? You’re claiming you work in a field you’ve shown zero actual education in.