Hard Maple flooring - solid planks
Canadian Maple (Hard Maple) is harder due to a beautiful drawings and decorative than the European.
Canadian Maple (Hard Maple) is harder due to a beautiful drawings and decorative than the European.
Hard Maple´s appearance
The sapwood of sugar maple is a lovely creamy white, while the heartwood ranges from creamy white to light reddish brown. This wood has a closed, subdued grain and a uniform texture, with medium figuring. The figuring is variously described as quilted, curly, "bird's-eye," and "fiddleback." During the grading process, interestingly figured boards are often culled from the group and sold at a premium. Due to its light color and durability, maple is a popular choice when a "contemporary" look is desired for a wood floor.
Hard Maple´s properties
Canadian Maple is classified as hardwood. Other species of maple are considered soft woods. As well as Teak and White Oak has a high resistance to pressure. Canadian Maple is extremely strong and has excellent resistance to stress. It is remarkably resistant to wear and therefore is mainly used for floors in places where there is a large load, such as basketball need halls, bowling alleys and other sports. Equally well be applied to the maple floors in homes and flats. Hard Maple is a harder and more durable variety of wood flooring.
Hard Maple´s workability
Canadian maple wood is difficult to work with. It is relatively resistant to cleavage and has a good consistency.
Hard Maple´s principal uses
Sugar Maple has been called "nature's perfect flooring," and it is known to have been used as a flooring for sports activities going back over 150 years. There is practically no limit to the uses that can be found for sugar maple. As flooring, it has been used to create a bright, cheerful, and elegant ambiance in countless homes, as well as providing a highly durable surface in gymnasiums, bowling alleys, and dance floors. In addition, this resilient wood is used for lumber, furniture, cabinetry, shoe lasts, tool handles, bowling pins, musical instruments, spools and bobbins, wooden novelties, piano frames, crates, and pulpwood. Last but not least, its sap provides a delicious, edible distillation in the form of pancake syrup.