More than 7 billion board feet of Douglas-fir lumber were used in the
United States for new construction or renovation of existing buildings
during 1994. Past research has shown that almost every piece of Dougl
as-fir lumber has measurable warp. As a result, a high proportion of p
ieces may be underutilized or discarded at the job site. Recent resear
ch indicates that warp within structural grades of softwood lumber may
not be attributable to growth characteristics such as compression woo
d, grain orientation, and knot size. This study investigated the impac
t of sweep in logs on warp in Douglas-fir lumber. Results showed that
the magnitude of crook and twist in lumber produced from straight logs
and logs with sweep was significantly different. Surprisingly, lumber
sawn from logs with sweep had less twist than lumber sawn from straig
ht logs and showed no significant difference in bow. Lumber sawn from
logs with sweep in two planes had more crook than lumber sawn from str
aight logs, but the difference was slight. Although ions with sweep yi
eld less lumber than straight logs, curve sawing in high-tech sawmills
may diminish this difference. These findings indicate that Douglas-fi
r logs with sweep could produce straighter lumber than straight logs.