It is found mostly on the west coast of the south island currently only a portion of this timber is available to bring harvests in line with sustainable levels.
Is rimu a hardwood or softwood.
Rimu is a fine even textured medium density softwood.
The middle zone known as coloured rimu has a light brown colour and the sap wood a pale lighter brown tone.
Softwoods are less dense and also tend to be more resinous.
The heartwood is highly decorative with a close even texture and is harder than the sapwood and very stable.
Rimu has moderate durability with the heartwood class 3 being more durable than the sapwood class 4.
Rimu is a dense native timber of nz.
In general hardwood comes from a deciduous tree which loses its leaves annually and softwood comes from a conifer which usually remains evergreen.
Contains resinous tracheids resin plugs with dark reddish brown contents which look nearly identical to diffuse parenchyma lookalikes substitutes.
The terms hardwood and softwood refer to the botanical origins of woods and not to their density or physical hardness.
This means they ignite much faster and thus can be good as a starter wood to get your wood fire going.
Medium earlywood to latewood transition.
All trees reproduce by producing seeds but the seed structure varies.
It is deep red in colour and is strong and durable.
Softwoods come from cone bearing trees often with evergreen needle like leaves belonging to the botanical group gymnosperm plants with naked seeds.
A stunning timber one of the most beautiful in the world.
The seasoned heartwood which can be beautifully figured is reddish brown or occasionally yellowish with irregular pigmented streaks while the sapwood has a lighter brown tone.
Rimu is a medium density softwood with a fine textured grain the heart wood is reddish brown.
Hardwood usually costs more gives off more heat but takes longer to dry than softwood.
Hardwoods come from broad leaved trees either.
Softwood and hardwood are distinguished botanically in terms of their reproduction not by their end use or appearance.
Not to be confused with karri eucalyptus diversicolor a completely unrelated australian hardwood with a very similar.