1. |
All wood is composed of cellulose, lignin, hemicelluloses, and minor amounts (5% to 10%) of extraneous materials contained in a cellular structure.
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True |
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False |
2. |
To use wood to its best advantage and most effectively in engineering applications, specific characteristics or physical properties must be considered.
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True |
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False |
3. |
The inherent factors that keep wood in the forefront of raw materials are many and varied, but a chief attribute is its availability in many species, sizes, shapes, and conditions to suit almost every demand.
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True |
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False |
4. |
Dry wood has bad insulating properties against heat, sound, and electricity. It tends to absorb and dissipate vibrations under some conditions of use, and yet it is an incomparable material for such musical instruments as the violin. |
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True |
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False |
5. |
Trees are divided into two broad classes, usually referred to as hardwoods and softwoods. These names can be confusing since some softwoods are actually harder than some hard- woods, and conversely some hardwoods are softer than some softwoods. |
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True |
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False |
6. |
What does table 1-1 illustrate about?
(Refer Pg 1-2)
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Major resources of U.S. softwoods according to region |
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Average toughness values |
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Average coefficients of variation for some mechanical properties |
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None of the above |
7. |
The most vigorously growing wood-based industries are those that convert wood to thin slices (veneer), particles (chips, flakes), or fiber pulps and reassemble the elements to produce various types of engineered panels such as plywood, particleboard, strandboard, veneer lumber, paper, paperboard, and fiberboard products.
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True |
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False |
8. |
American white ash is used principally for non-striking tool handles, oars, baseball bats, and other sporting and athletic goods.
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True |
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False
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9. |
Principal uses for the black ash group are decorative veneer, cabinets, millwork, furniture, cooperage, and crates. |
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True |
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False |
10. |
Beech is used mainly in venetian blinds, sashes and doorframes, moulding, apiary supplies, woodenware, and boxes. |
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True |
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False |
11. |
Black cherry is used principally for furniture, fine veneer panels, and architectural woodwork. Other uses include burial caskets, woodenware, novelties, patterns, and paneling. |
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True |
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False |
12. |
Buckeye is suitable for pulping for paper; in lumber form, it has been used principally for furniture, boxes and crates, food containers, woodenware, novelties, and planning mill products. |
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True |
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False |
13. |
The wood of honey locust (Gleditsia triacanthos) has many desirable qualities, such as attractive figure and color, hardness, and strength, but it is little used because of its scarcity.
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True |
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False |
14. |
The Red Oak is used principally for lumber, veneer, plywood, slack cooperage, railroad crossties, fuel, pulpwood, boxes and crates, furniture, interior moulding, and millwork.
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True |
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False |
15. |
What does figure 1-1 illustrate about?
(Refer Pg 1-15)
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Cypress-tupelo swamp near New Orleans, LA |
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Wood is favored for waterfront structures |
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Ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) growing in an open or park-like habitat |
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None of the above |
16. |
Most redwood lumber is used for building. It is remanufactured extensively into siding, sashes, doors, blinds, millwork, casket stock, and containers.
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True |
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False |
17. |
Albarco is primarily used for general construction and carpentry wood, but it can also be used for furniture components, shipbuilding, flooring, veneer for plywood, and turnery.
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True |
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False |
18. |
Hura is used principally where strength and resistance to wear are required. Uses include ship and dock building, lock gates, wharves, piers, jetties, vats, piling, planking, industrial flooring, bridges, and some specialty items (fishing rods and billiard cue butts). |
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True |
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False |
19. |
What does ASTM stand for? |
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American Standard for Testing and Materials |
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American Society for Testing and Materials |
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American Standard for Transportation and Materials |
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None of the above |
20. |
Peroba is suited for general construction work and is favored for fine furniture and cabinetwork and decorative veneers. Other uses include flooring, interior woodwork, sashes and doors, and turnery. |
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True |
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False |
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