Huber Advantech Factory Tour

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024
  • We recently had a chance to bring a camera to the Huber Engineered Woods OSB manufacturing facility to see how their AdvanTech subfloor is made. Follow the entire process, from the rough logs entering the factory to the finished sheets heading for your local lumber yard.
    Subscribe to our channel to stay up to date on new Fine Homebuilding videos:
    / finehomebuilding
    Connect with Fine Homebuilding:
    Instagram: / finehomebuilding
    Facebook: / finehomebuildingmagazine
    Twitter: / fhbmagazine
    Pinterest: / fhbmagazine
    About Fine Homebuilding:
    We go directly to the job sites and design offices of the most qualified and talented builders and designers in the industry to get the information you need to create the highest quality homes possible. Driven by the ethos that exceptional homes are achievable and that craftsmanship is an honorable and worthy pursuit, FineHomebuilding.com has become the go-to resource for professional tradesmen, deeply knowledgeable enthusiasts, industry influencers, and forward-thinking companies, who are collectively committed to shaping the way we build.
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 9

  • @benmuirhead939
    @benmuirhead939 4 года назад +8

    I love Huber products and use them all the time but does anyone else get a little freaked out by the scale of modern stuff? 100 30 ton logging trucks every day in a continuous queue? They look like young trees and OSB is super wood efficient but this is just 1 plant from 1 company. I hope forests can keep up with this kind of intensity...

    • @randomman057
      @randomman057 4 года назад +5

      The logging industry has been managing the same timberland for decades and it is carefully managed. Those trees appear to be smaller trees that are culled during the early stages of new tree growth. This is done because without culling the trees will crowd one another and slow the growth of the trees needed in several years for timber. Basically they use trees that are useless as timber trees for OSB manufacturing. As noted in the video, Huber burns the bark as fuel for their furnaces, the timber industry tries to keep waste to a minimum as much as possible.

    • @randomman057
      @randomman057 4 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/R8A4fWeLpjE/видео.html
      A video explaining timber land management.

    • @95thousandroses
      @95thousandroses 4 года назад

      there is currently a glut of southern yellow pine. price is as low as its been in 50 years. almost not worth getting rid of.

    • @darthvader5300
      @darthvader5300 3 года назад

      I remember many decades ago of a technology that uses superheated and super-pressurized steam that mixes with wood flakes and blast them against a mold and is pressed still hot and allowing the natural wood liquids to bind them together. What happened to that technology? An another technology uses a method to use steam to bake wood to harden and strenghten them based on an ancient principle of using fire to harden wood. What happened to that technology? An another technology uses the ancient Biblical principle of making gopher wood in which layers of wood sheets are bonded-saturated with natural boiling sap resins and then are pressed using mechanical vise and allowed to cure overnight. The next day when tested, when bent, only the outer layers will slightly crack but no more BUT THE BONDED LAYER BETWEEN THE BONDED LAYERS WILL REMAIN UNBREAKABLE.

  • @skliros9235
    @skliros9235 3 года назад

    The best subfloor.

  • @robmac3287
    @robmac3287 3 года назад

    Excellent presentation!

  • @rogeracker-wolfhagen7941
    @rogeracker-wolfhagen7941 3 года назад

    Made in Maine. Up to the county in Easton.

  • @darthvader5300
    @darthvader5300 3 года назад +1

    I remember many decades ago of a technology that uses superheated and super-pressurized steam that mixes with wood flakes and blast them against a mold and is pressed still hot and allowing the natural wood liquids to bind them together. What happened to that technology? An another technology uses a method to use steam to bake wood to harden and strenghten them based on an ancient principle of using fire to harden wood. What happened to that technology? An another technology uses the ancient Biblical principle of making gopher wood in which layers of wood sheets are bonded-saturated with natural boiling sap resins and then are pressed using mechanical vise and allowed to cure overnight. The next day when tested, when bent, only the outer layers will slightly crack but no more BUT THE BONDED LAYER BETWEEN THE BONDED LAYERS WILL REMAIN UNBREAKABLE.