Choosing the right timber for the right landscape use is unbelievably confusing.
Timber vs hardwood.
Rubberwood is a low cost light tropical hardwood timber.
Examples of hardwood trees include alder balsa beech hickory mahogany maple oak teak and walnut.
Softwoods have a wide range of applications and are found in building components e g windows doors furniture medium density fiberboard mdf paper christmas trees and much more.
About 80 of all timber comes from softwood.
Rubberwood is a whitish lumber that gradually fades to a light brown.
The main difference between timber and wood is that the timber is a wood that has been processed into beams and planks and wood is a fibrous material from trees of other plants.
Softwood and hardwood are distinguished in nature in terms of their reproduction rather than their end appearance and attributes.
Softwood comes from conifer which usually remains evergreen.
Timber was one of the first building materials used by man.
We explore the differences between the two woods and alternatives allowing you to understand the differences and choose the right timber.
This latex is used to make rubber.
Due to modern advanced treatment techniques the durability of timber in construction is now far superior.
Rubberwood is derived from the rubber tree.
Did you know only sapwood can be treated correctly to withstand outdoor use but still much of the timber that is treated is.
In many aspects it is comparable to teak.
The rubber tree gets its name from the commercially harvested milky latex it exudes when cut.