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Species guide

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American hackberry

Latin name

Celtis occidentalis

Other Common names

Common hackberry

Distribution

Eastern USA.

General Description

Hackberry is closely related to sugarberry (Celtis laevigata) and is a member of the elm family. There is little difference between sapwood and heartwood which is yellowish grey to light brown with yellow streaks. The wood is very susceptible to blue staining before and after kilning and has irregular grain, occasionally straight and sometimes interlocked, with a fine uniform texture.

Working Properties

The wood planes and turns well and is intermediate in its ability to hold nails and screws, and stains and polishes satisfactorily. Hackberry dries readily with minimal degrade. It has a fairly high shrinkage and may be susceptible to movement in performance.

Physical Properties

Hackberry is moderately hard, heavy and has medium bending strength, high shock resistance but is low in stiffness. It has a good steam bending classification.

Durability

Non-resistant to heartwood decay. Liable to attack by forest longhorn and Buprestid beetle. The heartwood is moderately resistant to preservative treatment but the sapwood is permeable.

Availability

USA:
Reasonable in lumber but mainly in the thinner standard thicknesses, and lower grades.

Export:
Limited due to low demand, and concerns about internal staining.

Main Uses

Furniture and kitchen cabinets, joinery, doors and mouldings.

Grading

Sometimes referred to as sugarberry and uses as an ash substitute. Best when purchased surfaced to ward against blue stain.

Technical statistics

Specific Gravity (12% M.C.):0.53
Average Weight (12% M.C.):593 kg/m3
Average Volume Shrinkage (Green to 6% M.C.):13.50%
Modulus of Elasticity:8205 MPa
Hardness:3914 N