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Shiplap

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Shiplap A board siding with joints cut out of the board allowing pieces to fit together with no overlapping.
Shutter A movable cover for a window used for protection from weather and intruders. ...

 


shiplapped lumber (planche à feuillure, f.) A form of matching lumber. A section one-half the thickness of the board is cut from the upper side of one edge, and a similar section from the lower side of the opposite edge.

Shiplap Lumber: Lumber that is edge-dressed to make a close rabbeted or lapped joint.

Shiplap are boards with rabbeted edges which overlap.
Shutter is a lightweight louvered or flush wood or non-wood frames in the form of doors located at each side of a window.
Siding is the finished covering of the outside wall.

Shiplap. See Lumber, shiplap.
Shutter. Usually lightweight louvered or flush wood or nonwood frames in the form of doors located at each side of a window.

SHIPLAP: Boards with lapped joints along their edges.
SHORING: Lumber placed in a slanted position to support the structure of a building or home temporarily.

SHIPLAP: Boards with lapped joints along their edges.
SHOE MOLD: Small rounded molding covering the joint between the flooring and the baseboard.

Lumber, shiplap - Lumber that is edge-dressed to make a close rabbeted or lapped joint.
Lumber, timbers - Yard lumber 5 or more inches in least dimension. Includes beams, stringers, posts, caps, sills, girders, and purlins ...

Shiplap siding
Shiplap siding provides the weatherproof security of a lap, and a decorative bend that looks like quarter-round molding below each seam. Overlaps can absorb movement of the house frame without opening. (Fig. 3)
Fig. 4 ...

Shiplap
Siding Boards of special design nailed horizontally to vertical studs with or without intervening sheathing to form the exposed surface of outside walls of frame buildings.
Sill Plate ...

Shiplap: Wood sheathing which is rabbeted so that the edges of the boards make a flush joint.
Shoe mold: The small mold against the baseboard at the floor.

Shiplap
1. A board with edges rabbeted so as to overlap flush from one board to the next. 2. An offset lamination of two layers of gypsumboard.
Shiplapped Lumber ...

Shiplap Boards with rabbeted edges overlapping. Shiplap Siding Boards of special design nailed horizontally to vertical studs with or without intervening sheathing to form the exposed surface of outside walls of frame buildings.

shiplap Boards with rabbeted edges overlapping
siding the outside finish between the casings ...

When multiple boards are used for instance in the back of a hutch, a shiplap arrangement should be used, so that each board has room to grow and shrink. Or boards can be fastened in the middle and allow them to grow out in both directions.

The sheathing material may be square-edge, shiplap, tongue-and-groove boards, or plywood or oriented strand board (OSB). Sheathing, in addition to serving as a base for the finished siding material, stiffens the frame to resist sway caused by wind.

Squeaks are caused by movement in wood seams between sheets of subflooring, friction noise in tongue and groove or shiplap flooring, and fingernails-on-blackboard rubbing against loosened nails. Stop the movement and you stop squeak.

Drop Siding
Usually inch thick and 6 and 8 inches wide with tongued-and-grooved or shiplap edges. Often used as siding without sheathing in secondary buildings.

"Basically, you put in piers and girders, frame out the roofline, lay the deck, pop in the doors shiplap-style, and do the finish carpentry-which can be as simple or as intricate as you want," says Clermont.

A weatherboard is a weather molding, horizontal boards on edge, nailed over the outside of light buildings. The boards overlap, often with a [[rebate]] at the lower edge of each board, to help keep out rain and wind. See [[clapboard]], [[shiplap]] ...

Plain timber boarding is fashionable, partly resulting from people's love of barn conversions. There are several different styles: rough-sawn timber (featheredge) looks more rustic; planed timber (shiplap) can look more urban and sophisticated ...

The wooden covering on the exterior of walls and the roof. Typically made of 1/2 inch construction-grade plywood; older homes may have shiplap boards or planks.
Sheathing paper ...

See also: Building, Wood, Water, Light, Floor