Your search resulted in 129 documents. Displaying 25 entries per page.
The Twelwth Report of the International Research Group on Wood Preservation 1982-1983
1983 - IRG/WP 5177
IRG Secretariat
The Fourth Annual Report of the International Research Group on Wood Preservation 1972-1973
1973 - IRG/WP 522
IRG Secretariat
Termite researcher questionnaire
1985 - IRG/WP 1274
J P La Fage
The Eleventh Report of the International Research Group on Wood Preservation 1980-82
1982 - IRG/WP 5154
IRG Secretariat
Committee for Research Co-operation request for OECD sponsorship.
1970 - IRG/WP A 10
Anonymous
Co-operative research project on L-joint testing. Progress report to May 1989
1989 - IRG/WP 2338
Further sets of data received from STU (Sweden) after 36 months exposure and Sipad-IRC (Yugoslavia) after 45 months exposure are presented and discussed in conjunction with data reported previously. The new data are generally in agreement with those presented previously and the major difference between institutes continues to be one of rate of colonisation rather than any relative difference in pe...
J K Carey, A F Bravery
Wood preservation research at the Technical University in Zvolen - Slovakia
2004 - IRG/WP 04-10538
Presented paper gives basic information about wood protection in Slovakia and research in the field of wood preservation at the Technical University in Zvolen – the Faculty of Wood Sciences and Technology. The degradation processes in wood and wooden composites caused by fungi,
environmental factors and fire, the identification of these processes, the protection of wood with fungicides and ot...
L Reinprecht
Methods of treatment of wood preservatives. The selection of appropriate preservation process with particular reference to mixed tropical forest resources. A key address
1982 - IRG/WP 3177
All wood is biodegradable. Many timber species have, however, sufficient natural durability to permit their use, particularly in protected situations, without any special precautions. Many others, of course, are readily attacked by insects and where there is sufficient moisture and air, by wood-decaying fungi. It is these timber species which benefit most from treatment with wood preservatives. Ev...
C R Levy
The Fifth Annual Report of the International Research Group on Wood Preservation 1973-1974
1974 - IRG/WP 531
IRG Secretariat
The Second Annual Report of the International Research Group on Wood Preservation 1970-1971
1971 - IRG/WP 502
IRG Secretariat
The Fifteenth Annual Report of the International Research Group on Wood Preservation 1985-1986
1986 - IRG/WP 5243
R Cockcroft
The International Research Group on Wood Preservation
1979 - IRG/WP 582
J M Baker
Reworded resolution
1976 - IRG/WP 145
New evidence has demonstrated that certain timber species are unexpectedly difficult to protect against biological degradation by the use of known preservation systems. Several of these timber species are expected to become of wide commercial use in the future. The issues raised are of such fundamental importance and require so intensive basic research that official bodies should be encouraged to ...
B Henningsson
The Sixteenth Report of the International Research Group on Wood Preservation 1986-1987
1987 - IRG/WP 5283
R Cockcroft
Re Questionnaire: The use of computers in wood preservation research
1985 - IRG/WP 2239
A questionnaire (Document No: IRG/WP/2240) concerning the use of computers in wood preservation research is introduced. Completing and returning the questionnaire will allow information to be collated on the usage of computers and computer programmes...
E F Baines
The First Annual Report of the International Research Group on Wood Preservation 1969-1970
1970 - IRG/WP A 7
IRG Secretariat
Wood preservation in Spain
1983 - IRG/WP 3266
This report includes some statistical data on the potential of Spanish forests and the country's timber consumption as well as detailing the extent of development of the wood products industries, and will help to give a better understanding of the use of this raw material in Spain. The main biological deteriorating organisms which damage wood are given and the capacity of the industrial t...
A Lopez de Roma, R Cockcroft
An overview of termite control in buildings in Kenya
1997 - IRG/WP 97-10242
Termites are well known pests of wooden products and structural timber and are responsible for considerable damage in the building sector in sub-Saharan Africa. A general diagnostic survey of damaging termite species in agriculture, forestry and buildings was carried out for the first time in Kenya (1991-1992). Termite species implicated in damage to wooden materials and structural timber in build...
G R S Ochiel, W Gitonga, L Toft
Wood preservation in China
1989 - IRG/WP 3546
Huiming Zhou, Zhongwei Jin
IRG Research Grants
1992 - IRG/WP 92-5384
IRG Secretariat
Co-operative research at the Naval Research Laboratory on wood extractives and related compounds as antiborer agents
1977 - IRG/WP 429
J D Bultman, K K Parrish
Preservación de maderas en Bolivia
1986 - IRG/WP 3360
Este documento ofrece datos generales concerníentes a los recursos forestales de Bolivia, las facilidades existentes para preservación de maderas, la investigación y educación en esa materia. Se proporciona información sobre instituciones vinculadas a la actividad y las perspectivas del tratamiento de maderas en el país....
A S Viscarra
Questionnaire: The use of computers in wood preservation research
1985 - IRG/WP 2240
E F Baines
Sustainability Through New Technologies for Enhanced Wood Durability. COST Action E37 – A New Action in the Forestry Domain
2004 - IRG/WP 04-40293
The main overall objective of the action is to concentrate on the contribution of wood durability on the sustainability through the development of systems for quality assurance and perfoamance of modified wood and wood products as alternatives to wood treated with traditional preservatives. By this means it seeks to improve and consequently increase the cost-effective use of sustainably produced E...
R-D Peek
Co-operative field trial. Background notes and questionnaire for field sites
1992 - IRG/WP 92-3733
The first co-operative field trial was designed to study the occurrence of soft-rot in CCA treated hardwoods. Generally speaking very similar results were obtained from the different field sites. In the early part of the trial considerable variability was evident with regard to the rate and type of attack which occurred in the untreated material. With the CCA treated timber the type of decay was p...
D J Dickinson