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Pallet Wood for Interior Use?

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April 27, 2020, 09:07 AM
P250UA5
Pallet Wood for Interior Use?
My wife wants to do a wood wall in our guest room & her company has a large amount of pallets available at no cost.

Apart from the effort to disassemble, is there any issue with using pallet wood for this purpose?




The Enemy's gate is down.
April 27, 2020, 09:08 AM
petr
What was hauled on them? Anything hazardous, no way!
April 27, 2020, 09:10 AM
P250UA5
quote:
Originally posted by petr:
What was hauled on them? Anything hazardous, no way!


She works for a small boutique jewelry company, so I'm 99% nothing hazardous.




The Enemy's gate is down.
April 27, 2020, 09:11 AM
shovelhead
No expert here or environmentalist but I'd be concerned if those were pallets that were used multiple times if and what has been absorbed into the wood.

Most pallets I have seen are pretty rough so splinters could be an issue also.


-------------------------------------——————
————————--Ignorance is a powerful tool if applied at the right time, even, usually, surpassing knowledge(E.J.Potter, A.K.A. The Michigan Madman)
April 27, 2020, 09:14 AM
Patriot
Try Google...

In addition to the items on the pallets, there are various treatments some use on pallets to prevent mold and bugs.

Personally, I wouldn't...


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April 27, 2020, 09:14 AM
Vanwall
Have you taken apart a pallet yet?

They are not made for easy disassembly.
April 27, 2020, 09:21 AM
BillF
One of my woodworking had a article on using them as flooring. The result was very nice floor in the front room. He already had a surface planer and router table. The only expenses were nails, sealer and time
April 27, 2020, 09:38 AM
P250UA5
Thanks for the quick replies. Will have to find out if they were multiple use pallets, or if they were new on original delivery.

I've disassembled a couple well-worn pallets & it is a bit of a pain, but not as bad as I was expecting. Finding the seemingly random nails throughout was unexpected, especially before putting a saw to it.




The Enemy's gate is down.
April 27, 2020, 09:46 AM
BigWhup
I recently pulled about 200 staples out of one, thinking I would make something out of it. After a couple months looking at the wood, finally tossed it in the dumpster.
April 27, 2020, 09:52 AM
architect
If you are looking for an excuse to buy:



and you have a lot of time on your hands, I'd say go for it. If you are more thinking crowbar/working with the raw wood, not in a million years.
April 27, 2020, 10:07 AM
Kraquin
Most are made from southern yellow pine. If you're really bent on that look then save yourself the bug and disassembly hassle and just go buy some 2x4's, throw a bunch of rocks at them, drive over them a few times, cut to size and brush 'em with a flat sealer or gloss if she prefers.
April 27, 2020, 11:26 AM
P250UA5
Thanks again the further responses & suggestions.

The appeal here was the copious amount of free material, especially in the current environment & with the 13% pay cut we took at work.

Will have to investigate & see what shape the pallets are in & possibly their origin/prior use.




The Enemy's gate is down.
April 27, 2020, 11:27 AM
Rev. A. J. Forsyth

April 27, 2020, 11:42 AM
Chris42
Pallets are a relatively poor grade of wood, think “Dixie cup disposable”.

Around here many are part oak, some poplar and a miscellaneous mix of other stuff.

If I had a slew of kids to keep busy and a pile of pallets I would pass out the hammers and pry bars and tell them to go at it.

Assembly of pallets often (as noted) involve air powered nail guns or staple guns. Twist shank or ring shank to reduce pull out seems to work. They break off and are, as a result, hard on the power tools to follow. A circular saw hitting an embedded nail throws sparks and bits of metal. That may include bits of teeth from the blade.

All of that said, your labor being free, pallets being free, sure, it will work. I suggest sorting your wood by type. You might even screw down the new flooring with a slight counter sink to the screws. When the day comes that you want to change it, they come out real easy.
April 27, 2020, 11:45 AM
46and2
quote:
Originally posted by architect:
If you are looking for an excuse to buy:


  • a hydraulic spreader
  • a thickness planer, and
  • a metal/nail detector,


and you have a lot of time on your hands, I'd say go for it. If you are more thinking crowbar/working with the raw wood, not in a million years.

This.
April 27, 2020, 12:01 PM
BOATTRASH1
I know I saw a package of pallet wood at Lowes several months back. Already cleaned up and planed ready to go.
April 27, 2020, 12:04 PM
smschulz
quote:
Apart from the effort to disassemble, is there any issue with using pallet wood for this purpose?


It doesn't matter where it comes from (unless it is something obvious).
What matters is it the correct wood for your project and what is necessary to process it for your use.
Sometimes the process can be cost more in time and prep than what it is worth to do.
You just need to evaluate.
Other than that I have no problem repurposing some pallets.
April 27, 2020, 01:06 PM
rburg
You're treating pallets as a refined and monolithic material. All the same. They're not. Lots of guys living west of here seem to make their living salvaging them or stealing them and then reselling. This is old data, but they used to sell for $6 each if solid and no broken boards. I'd see overloaded pickup trucks rattling down the road with them stacked way too high. Guess the cops got after them because they're loaded lower and strapped down these days.

Anyway, small wood and sawmills cut them and then sell them. Doesn't matter the species of wood, meaning any trash wood can be mixed in. Because multiple makers are involved, the quality of manufacture varies all over the map. At work (gawd I hate how that sounds) we had a maintenance guy who did woodworking on the side. He always had his eyes open for cherry boards and even an occasional walnut. He'd use or even make spare time back in the metal shop. If a pallet had a desirable board, he'd haul it off, replace the board with one he didn't like and no one was wiser. The fool warehouse manager just was told he was reconditioning them.

He kind of was. His big problem was the boards were often different sizes. The fly by night operators would just assemble them out of any size of junk wood they had on hand.

So back to the original idea. If you've got a planer you can make them all the same thickness, or not if you don't mind the variety.

And be careful they make lousy firewood. Often not dried and as stated earlier, full of metal. Particularly lousy for bonfire wood. They do burn but leave "tire worms" to pick up in mowers or anything inflatable. Not single season things, either. You can get a flat 10 years down the road. They also work wonders on kids bare feet.


Unhappy ammo seeker
April 27, 2020, 01:09 PM
YellowJacket
The pallet wood look has been a huge trend for the last 5 years or so. It's not just a cheap material, it is the reclaimed look that people are after. The variance in thickness and color in the material is a feature, not a bug.



I'm gonna vote for the funniest frog with the loudest croak on the highest log.
April 27, 2020, 02:15 PM
BGULL
I'm on the side of leery, when the prior use of a pallet may not be clearly known. Way back in the day I would raid the trash at motorcycle dealers for crates/pallets fromm the Far East. The wood looked like Philippine Mahogany but was way a problem to cut and work. It did make good deer stand material.
The only other time i went with pallets was when a local specialty tubing mill was selling the palletts their stainless strip came in on. I presumed that for a premium material those pallets would be specifically made for the coils. That material was pretty clear oak that I ended up making parallel clamps from.
I second the idea of finding a local mill and looking for their culls and castoffs. I'm in East Texas and there are some good choices. I have seen on facebook one guy closer to DFW (NE Tx) that offers culls and remants from cutting slabs for $20 a load before he burns the pile. While you still have labor involved, you go straight into cutting and sizing, while avoiding the PITA of breaking down the pallets.


Bill Gullette