Skip to main content

Prático

Lumber Dimension Converter

calculator.mkLumberTitle

calculator.mkNominalSize
calculator.mkLength
calculator.mkLengthUnit
calculator.mkQuantity
calculator.mkPricePerBF

Guia detalhado em breve

Estamos preparando um guia educacional completo para o Lumber Dimension Converter. Volte em breve para explicações passo a passo, fórmulas, exemplos reais e dicas de especialistas.

💡

Dica Pro

For tight-fitting joinery, measure actual lumber dimensions, not nominal. A 2×4 dado joint planned for 2-inch depth will only need 1.5-inch dado — adjusting calculations to actual dimensions prevents misfitting joints and wasted material. Always plan from actual dimensions; label communications by nominal (since that's how lumber is purchased and labeled at retailers).

Dificuldade:Iniciante

Você sabia?

The 'inch' difference between nominal and actual lumber dimensions wasn't formalized until 1964 when the American Softwood Lumber Standard PS 20 was first published. Before that, regional variation existed — Pacific Northwest mills produced slightly different actual dimensions than Southern Pine mills. The standardization was driven by mass production housing (post-WWII suburb construction) requiring consistent material sizing across regions. The 'shrinkage' allowance was calibrated to typical kiln-drying losses plus standard planing reductions, but the math is approximate — actual dimensions can still vary by 1/16 inch between mills and lots.

Mathematically verified
Reviewed May 2026
Used 53K+ times
Our methodology
🔒
100% Grátis
Sem registo
Preciso
Fórmulas verificadas
Instantâneo
Resultados imediatos
📱
Compatível com móvel
Todos os dispositivos

Configurações

PrivacidadeTermosSobre© 2026 PrimeCalcPro