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Christian McArdle
 
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Default OK to use chipboard screws in ordinary wood?

I tend to like using chipboard screws in ordinary wood because they
are narrow and seem to have a sharp thread which lets them go in more
easily.


I use them all the time. Quite frankly, if its got a thread, a pointed tip
and a posidriv head, then I'll use it!

Christian.


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Andy Dingley
 
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On Thu, 19 May 2005 16:13:21 +0100, Bill Woods
wrote:

But now I am tending to prefer these Supadrive/Pozidrive headed
chipboard screws.


What's a "chipboard screw" ? If you mean the Screwfix Goldscrews (if
they're still available), then they're perfectly adequate on anything. A
_real_ chipboard screw though has an even finer pitch, usually by being
a twin start thread (Screwfix's Quicksillvers). These are OK for most
timber, but you'll get problems with the softest ones, such as western
red cedar or hemlock.

The ones to avoid are drywall or plasterboard screws. They're brittle.
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Andy Dingley wrote:
On Thu, 19 May 2005 16:13:21 +0100, Bill Woods
wrote:


But now I am tending to prefer these Supadrive/Pozidrive headed
chipboard screws.


What's a "chipboard screw" ? If you mean the Screwfix Goldscrews (if
they're still available), then they're perfectly adequate on

anything. A
_real_ chipboard screw though has an even finer pitch, usually by

being
a twin start thread (Screwfix's Quicksillvers). These are OK for

most
timber, but you'll get problems with the softest ones, such as

western
red cedar or hemlock.

The ones to avoid are drywall or plasterboard screws. They're

brittle.

I use those too, and self tappers. And occasioanlly flat ended ones
with the coarse wood type thread (not sure what theyre called)

Any coarse thread screw can be used successfully in wood. PB screws may
suffer a low level of breakages if you dont use a pilot hole, so I use
them where Im doing a pilot hole, or less often in place where the
occasional broken scrwe will be ok.


NT

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Chris Bacon
 
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bigcatmeeow.co.uk wrote:
Andy Dingley wrote:
a twin start thread (Screwfix's Quicksillvers). These are OK for most
timber, but you'll get problems with the softest ones, such as
western red cedar or hemlock.


Hemlock is as hard as hell.
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Andy Dingley
 
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On Thu, 19 May 2005 18:29:41 +0100, Chris Bacon
wrote:

Hemlock is as hard as hell.


Like hell it is. It's harder than WRC and the Abies firs, or even
poplar, but in a comparative scale of timbers commercially common in the
UK, it's at the soft end of things. Even the pines are harder.



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David Lang
 
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Hemlock is as hard as hell.

Like hell it is. It's harder than WRC and the Abies firs, or even
poplar, but in a comparative scale of timbers commercially common in the
UK, it's at the soft end of things. Even the pines are harder.


I use a lot of square hemlock stair spindles from Wickes in a regular job I
do. I've never noticed it being especially hard. Machines beautifully -
cheap source of decent hardwood.

Dave


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You can even use old drill bits in wood, hammer them in to use em as
fixings, thats how tolerant softwood is.

NT

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Stuart Noble
 
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wrote in message
oups.com...
You can even use old drill bits in wood, hammer them in to use em as
fixings, thats how tolerant softwood is.

Pitch pine is a softwood......


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SJF
 
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Pitch pine is a softwood......

Yes!

From an engineering materials course, taken many years ago, I remember that
the terms *hardwood* and *softwood* do not define the density or hardness of
the wood. Rather, they indicate that the parent tree was deciduous
(hardwood) or coniferous (softwood). Since this industry standard
definition differs from common concepts, confusion abounds.

SJF


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Stuart Noble
 
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"SJF" wrote in message news:X2pje.211$tp.19@fed1read05...
Pitch pine is a softwood......


Yes!

From an engineering materials course, taken many years ago, I remember
that
the terms *hardwood* and *softwood* do not define the density or

hardness
of
the wood. Rather, they indicate that the parent tree was deciduous
(hardwood) or coniferous (softwood). Since this industry standard
definition differs from common concepts, confusion abounds.

Yep. Balsa is a hardwood, but not a hard wood.


--
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It has removed 4843 spam emails to date.
Paying users do not have this message in their emails.
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Dave
 
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Andy Dingley wrote:


The ones to avoid are drywall or plasterboard screws. They're brittle.


Is there a quick way to find out what is brittle, ie hit the side with a
hammer etc

Dave
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TonyK
 
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Quite frankly, if its got a thread, a pointed tip
and a posidriv head, then I'll use it!

Christian.


Go on, admit it. You'll screw anything ;-)


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