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Species guide

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American cherry

Latin name

Prunus serotina

Other Common names

American black cherry

Distribution

Throughout Eastern USA. Main commercial areas Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia and New York States.

General Description

The heartwood of cherry varies from rich red to reddish brown and will darken on exposure to light. In contrast the sapwood is creamy white. The wood has a fine uniform straight grain, smooth texture, and may naturally contain brown pith flecks and small gum pockets.

Working Properties

Cherry is easy to machine, nails and glues well and when sanded, stained and polished, it produces an excellent smooth finish. It dries fairly quickly with moderately large shrinkage, but is dimensionally stable after kilning.

Physical Properties

The wood is of medium density with good wood bending properties, it has low stiffness and medium strength and shock resistance.

Durability

Rated as resistant to heartwood decay. The sapwood is liable to attack by common furniture beetle, and the heartwood moderately resistant to preservative treatment.

Availability

USA:
Regionally available.

Export:
Widely available in a full range of specifications and grades as both lumber and veneer.

Main Uses

Furniture and cabinet making, high class joinery, kitchen cabinets, mouldings, panelling, flooring, doors, boat interiors, musical instruments, turning and carving.

Grading

Pin knots are a natural characteristic and not considered a defect. Refer to the grading guide and cherry is often sold with a heartwood colour specification of 90/50.

Technical statistics

Specific Gravity (12% M.C.):0.5
Average Weight (12% M.C.):561 kg/m3
Average Volume Shrinkage (Green to 6% M.C.):9.20%
Modulus of Elasticity:10,274 MPa
Hardness:4226 N