1. In masonry, a dimension greater (by the thickness of a mortar joint) than the dimensions of the actual masonry unit; in the United States, not exceeding ½ inch (13 mm). 2. In lumber, a dimension that may vary from the actual dimensions as provided for in the local building co...
Scale the model to be one tenth of actual size. Scale To alter according to a standard or by degrees; adjust in calculated amounts Scaled down their demands. Scaled back the scheduled pay increase. Scale To estimate or measure the quantity of lumber in (logs or uncut trees). Scale To cl...
which is based on an actual mill study conducted in Alabama in 2003, discusses the impact of curve sawing on southern pine dimension lumber manufacturing with emphasis on potential improvements in lumber volume and value yields associated with various input log distributions in terms of size and sev...
The size measurement of the dimension lumber is the basic work of defect detection, the dimension manufacturing process and material application [9]. Manual measurement using a steel tape, triangle ruler and a vernier caliper is a common size measurement method for dimension lumber. A Roller ...
<-- dimensional lumber -->Dimension lumber,Dimension scantling, ∨Dimension stockCarp., lumber for building, etc., cut to the sizes usually in demand, or to special sizes as ordered. --Dimension stone, stone delivered from the quarry rough, but brought to such sizes as are requisite for cu...