Acetylated softwood - The miracle material of the 21st Century.


A recent marvellous development in the chemical modification of timber means that fast-grown plantation softwood can, in a totally non-toxic process, be converted to
perform better than any existing hardwood. With every prospect of replacing tropical hardwood as a construction material, this truly renewable eco-friendly resource is set to change the face of an industry currently dominated by pvc.

By adding additional acetyl molecules from commercial acetic anhydride during a patent kilning process
the timber is hardened and becomes unable to absorb water. The resulting dimensional stability is remarkable, and the treated timber becomes, to all intents and purposes, a new species that machines as well as any hardwood and neither shrinks, swells, warps, nor rots in the most arduous conditions.

The process was first proposed in 1928, and many attempts have been made over the intervening decades to devise a commercially viable process. A British Company - Titan Wood - has recently succeeded in this, and commercial quantities are becoming available from their Dutch processing plant at an affordable price. The long gestation period means that there is a great deal of test material to confirm the extraordinary performance in service. Our own TRADA has samples in its so-called ‘graveyard’ that enables them to support claims of a 60 year minimum life guarantee, while the stability of the material also extends the life expectancy of the applied finishes.

The industrial process results in a dried timber completely permeated by the process which
extends right through the material and, unlike most other treatments, the subsequent machining of profiles removes none of the protection afforded by the process, yet there's nothing in the wood that isn't there naturally.

Lengthwise finger-jointing eliminates knots and reduces manufacturing waste. With a negative carbon footprint, and no restrictions on disposal of this non-toxic natural product, can there be any better material to use in the construction of architectural joinery? We think not.

Combine this new timber with the technical benefits of the long established SupaWOOD window system, designed many years ago to drag window design out of the dark ages, and the name must surely now be truly justified - THE SUPAWOOD SYSTEM

Sounds too good to be true?   Click HERE to check out this independent report from The University of Wales
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