Maple Burl - Big Leaf
Acer Macrophyllum
Western USA

 

Turning Blanks $ 4.50 per lbs

Slabs 3" & Thicker and wedges or chunks $ 4.20 per lbs

Slabs range in width and length depending on the shape of the Burl :)

Cluster Burl logs from time to time.

Many sizes, also whole Burl ( BIG ) sections, please inquire.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Assumed, Wood Working Properties & Specifications

 

Acer spp.
Aceraceae

Maple

Maple (Acer spp.) contains about 120 species native to Asia, North America,
Mexico and Guatemala, and the European/Mediterranean region, with the rest in Eurasia, Malaysia and northern Africa. The Maples can be separated into two groups based on the ray widths of their microscopic anatomy, the soft maple group and the hard maple group. Species within each group look alike microscopically.
Acer is the classical Latin name of maple.
Acer barbatum hammock maple, Florida maple, southern sugar maple, sugar maple
Acer circinatum vine maple, mountain maple
Acer glabrum bark maple, California mountain maple, Douglas maple, dwarf maple, mountain maple, New Mexico maple, rocky mountain maple, shrubby maple, sierra maple, soft maple
Acer grandidentatum bigtooth maple, canyon maple, hard maple, large-toothed maple, sugar maple, ultravioletalde bigtooth maple, western sugar maple
Acer leucoderme chalk maple, palebark maple, sugar maple, whitebark maple
Acer macrophyllum* big-leaf, bigleaf maple, broadleaf maple, broadleaved maple, bugleaf maple, Californian maple, Oregon maple, pacific maple, white maple
Acer negundo* maple, ashleaf maple, black ash, boxelder, boxelder maple, California boxelder, cut-leaved maple, inland boxelder, manitoba maple, negundo maple, red river maple, stinking ash, sugar ash, three-leaved maple, western boxelder
Acer nigrum* black maple, black sugar maple, hard maple, rock maple, sugar maple, white maple
Acer pennsylvaticum buckwood, goose-foot maple, moosewood, mountain alder, northern maple, Pennsylvanian maple, striped dogwood, striped maple, whistlewood
Acer rubrum* Carolina red maple, drummond maple, drummond red maple, Oregon maple, red maple, scarlet maple, shoe-peg maple, silver maple, soft maple, southern soft maple, swamp maple, three-pointed-leaf maple, three-toothed red maple, water maple, white maple
Acer saccharinum* maple, papascowood, river maple, silver maple, silverleaf maple, soft maple, swamp maple, water maple, white maple
Acer saccharum* bird's-eye maple, black maple, curly maple, hard maple, rock maple, rough maple, sugar, sugar maple, sugar-tree, sweet maple, thumb-nail maple
Acer spicatum goose-foot maple, low maple, moose maple, mountain maple, mountain maple-bush, spiked maple, water maple
*commercial species

Distribution:
Acer rubrum Acer saccharinum Acer saccharum
Throughout most of North America, with commercial species in the eastern United States and Canada and the western coast of the United States (bigleaf maple).

The Tree: Maples grow to heights of 120 ft (36 m), with a diameter of 3 ft (1 m). Forest grown trees may have a clear bole of 60 ft (18 m).

General Wood Characteristics:
Acer rubrum Acer saccharinum Acer saccharum
Maple lumber comes principally from the Middle Atlantic and Lake States, which together account for about two-thirds of the production. The wood of sugar maple and black maple is known as hard maple; that of silver maple, red maple, and boxelder as soft maple. The sapwood of the maples is commonly white with a slight reddish-brown tinge; the heartwood is light reddish brown, but sometimes is considerably darker. The sapwood is from 3 to 5+ inches (76 to 127+ mm) thick.
Hard maple has a fine, uniform texture, turns well on a lathe, is resistant to abrasion and has no characteristic odor or taste. It is heavy, strong, stiff, hard, and resistant to shock, and it has large shrinkage. Sugar maple is generally straight grained but the grain also occurs as "birds-eye," "curly," and "fiddleback" grain.
The wood of soft maples resembles that of hard maples but is not as heavy, hard and strong, the better grade of soft maple has been substituted for hard maple in furniture. The sapwood in the soft maples is considerably wider than that in the hard maples and has a lighter heartwood color.
Maple lumber sometimes has olive or greenish black discolored areas known as mineral streak or mineral stain, which may be due to injury. Maple wood stains well and takes a high polish. It is intermediate in gluing and has low decay resistance.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Prices and inventory listed are subject to change without notice.
Please contact us for up to the minute pricing and
inventory, before quoting jobs from this site.



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