DIY Builds
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Thermal Degradation and Ignition Point The rate depends upon temperature and air circulation. The thermal degradation and ignition point of wood and plywood may be generalized by the following: 230° to 302° F (110° C to 150° C): The wood will char over time with the formation of charcoal.
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Read More »The strength of plywood and OSB (oriented strand board) structural panels is less at elevated temperatures than at normal temperatures. In the range of 0° F to 200° F, the strength of the panel at 12 percent moisture content or more will increase or decrease approximately 1/2 percent for each one degree increase or decrease in temperature from 70° F. However, such panels exposed to temperatures up to 200° F for a year or more may not experience any significant or permanent loss in strength. If drying occurs, the increase in strength due to drying may offset the loss in strength due to elevated temperature. The thermal expansion of wood is much smaller than expansion due to absorption of water. Because of this, thermal expansion can be neglected in cases where wood is subject to considerable swelling and shrinking. Thermal expansion may be of importance only in assemblies with other materials where the moisture content is maintained at a relatively constant level. Plywood and wood expand upon heating as do practically all known solids. The thermal expansion of wood, however, is quite small and requires exacting techniques for its measurement. The effect of temperature on plywood dimensions is related to the percentage of panel thickness in plies having grain perpendicular to the direction of expansion or contraction. The average coefficient of linear thermal expansion is about 3.4 x 10-6 inch/inch per degree F for a plywood panel with 60 percent of the plies or less running perpendicular to the face. The coefficient of thermal expansion for panel thickness is approximately 16 x 10-6 inch/inch per degree F.
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A number of attempts have been made to measure a definite ignition temperature of wood, with little success. A specific temperature is hard to define because there are so many contributing factors, such as size and shape of the material, air circulation, rate of heating, moisture content of the wood and so on. Estimates range from 510° to 932° F (270° to 500° C), but no value should be accepted as an absolute.
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