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Home » Categories » Arts, Crafts & Hobbies » Woodworking » Hardwood vs. Softwood » Printer Friendly

Hardwood vs. Softwood

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Submitted Wednesday, August 30, 2006
Submitted by: Marcus Peterson (8,281) Unverified Account
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Generally, hardwood is a coined term for one of the groups of deciduous trees that have broad leaves. Although many will likely mislead themselves into thinking otherwise, the actual hardness of the wood is not what is significant. While the term may connote an idea of it being with harder attributes, there is no minimum hardness requirement for it to be qualified as a hardwood. In contrast with the softwood, another kind of wood that is made from coniferous trees of class gymnosperm plants, hardwoods signify wood from angiosperm trees.

While the softwood tends to be less dense and is easier to cut, hardwood is denser and therefore sturdier than the softwood. Because of this quality, hardwood long ago became popular for use in structural components used in the construction of furniture and houses.

The components or cells in hardwoods found to have more variation from those of the softwood. These consist of vessel elements, fibers, and fibre-tracheids. Looking through a microscopic device at a transversal section, the arrangement and shape of these elements in hardwood appear solitary. Various patterns can also be seen in clusters resulting from the difference of sizes and shapes of the perforation plates, which fall into the categories of simple, scalariform, reticulate, and foraminate designs.

These characteristics are found to provide an attractive appearance for such things as furniture and flooring. Such characteristics also provide the assurance of longevity. Loaded with all these characteristics, products made from hardwood are of a remarkably higher quality than those made by other materials. These products became household entities, utilized by the offices and other establishments.






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