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Janka Hardness of North American Hardwoods

Started by WDH, April 22, 2022, 08:07:13 AM

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WDH

From time to time the subject of the hardness of some of our hardwoods comes up.  There is a test called the Janka Hardness Test where a steel ball is pressed into the wood and the amount of force required is measured.  The result is called the Janka hardness of that wood.  Here is a list of common North American hardwoods and their Janka Hardness.  You may be surprised by some of the values.

The higher the number, the harder the wood.  I have seen some stated results that shows osage orange is the hardest and some that show that live oak is the hardest.  In any case, they are both about equally hard.  One surprise to me was the range of hardness on the elms and in the Southern bottomland species cherrybark oak which is the best quality red oak in the deep South.  Hophornbeam and American hornbeam are both commonly called "ironwood", but they are not the hardest hardwods.  Just goes to show that common names are many times not accurate since iron is harder than wood :)

Osage Orange2760
Live oak2680
Mesquite2345
Persimmon2300
Dogwood2150
Pignut hickory2140
Mockernut hickory1970
Hophornbeam1860
American hornbeam1860
Serviceberry1800
Black locust1700
Elm winged1540
Red Oak cherrybark1480
Maple sugar1450
Oak white1360
Elm rock1320
Red Oak northern1290
Walnut black1010
Maple red950
Cherry950
Elm american830
Woodmizer LT40HDD35, John Deere 2155, Kubota M5-111, Kubota L2501, Nyle L53 Dehumidification Kiln, and a passion for all things with leafs, twigs, and bark.  hamsleyhardwood.com

aigheadish

I've moved stuff around in the shop but I like to keep stuff like this and metal melting temps on a piece of paper on the wall somewhere. I've also got a picture with the names of different parts of a log, to remind me what the heck you guys are talking about. I think since I've moved stuff I've managed to misplace all of those so this is cool! Thanks for sharing!
New Holland LB75b, Husqvarna 455 Rancher, Husqvarna GTH52XLS, Hammerhead 250, Honda VTX1300 for now and probably for sale (let me know if you are interested!)

Clark

Serviceberry? Which one!  :D

I have a couple small chunks kicking around and while I have never used them for anything...at all, they are very heavy for their size and given the relationship between density and hardness I'm surprised to see it rated so low.

Clark
SAF Certified Forester

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