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  1. #1
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    Red face SuperFeet SuperFoot?

    Hi peoples,

    Can Someone please explain what a SuperFoot and SuperFeet are , I realise that they are measurements but did a bit of a search on gogle but really didn't have much luck a few laughs though.

    I am a metric guy and whilst I can handle Feet and Inches I have never herd about SuperFeet SuperFoot
    I like to move it move it, I like to move it.

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  4. #3
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    Hi Willy

    Prior to metrication all timber was sold by the superfoot which is 1 foot x 1 foot x 1".

    The yanks still use it but here in Oz although they will say the price is so much a cubic metre or per cube all dimensioned timber is sold by the lineal metre.

  5. #4
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    Thanks BigShed

    so 300mm X 300mm X 25mm approx
    I like to move it move it, I like to move it.

  6. #5
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    Default superfoot

    well there ya go....

    Definition - superfoot

    One square-foot of one-inch thick lumber (12 x 12 x 1 inch). Used as a unit of lumber-volume

    imagine the guy in bunnies face if you ast him for 12 superfeet of durian

    (and imagine my face if he said "durian dun come in 12 inch widths...)

    spose not that distant from our cubic metre ideology....

    Jedo
    When all the world said I couldn't do it - they were right...

  7. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by WillyInBris View Post
    Thanks BigShed

    so 300mm X 300mm X 25mm approx
    "approx" indeed. Murrican timber is described by undressed dimensions (No, I don't mean nekkid). Actual size of such a "board foot" (BF) would be 305 x 292 x 19, also approx.

    Never heard of it called a "superfoot." Large quantities are sold by MBF, = 1000 BF.

    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  8. #7
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    Joe

    Superfoot was possibly an Austrailian term which was the same as your board foot.

  9. #8
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    Yep, I remember the days of the super foot but just to clarify a point, The timber we bought this way was not made up of boards that were 12 inches wide. To put it simply, if you were purchasing timber that was 4inches wide and 1/2 inch thick, you would actually receive 6 boards of that dimension if they were 1 foot in length.
    Of course, no-one in reality purchased just 1 foot of timber in this way, it was used for bulk purchases of timber but the same principle applied and thats how you calculated it.
    The little guys still bought their timber the same way as today, not by the super foot method.
    Reality is no background music.
    Cheers John

  10. #9
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    Yes when I was an apprentice patternmaker the boss used to buy the timber by the superfeet. A six tonne truck load of either Sugar Pine, Yellow Pine or Beech 18" wide x 2" thick 18 to 20 feet long

  11. #10
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    Anagote's in Tempe (in Sydney) still use superfeet. I was there last week and their price list was all per superfoot.

    It's a good unit of measure for the little guy. I don't even know what a cubic meter of timber looks like, nor do I give a rats, 'cause I'd never buy one - my guitar projects aren't that big. But if I pull a few good 1/4 sawn boards out of a stack, I'll have a pretty good idea what the price is gonna be without bothering the lumber yard guy to calculate it for me.

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    Malcolm Ward from Boutique Timbers uses superfeet in all his sales.
    Saw Malcolm at the Sydney Wood Show on the weekend with a large range of stunning slabs. His prices looked good too.
    Regards
    SG
    .... some old things are lovely
    Warm still with the life of forgotten men who made them ........................D.H. Lawrence
    https://thevillagewoodworker.blogspot.com/

  13. #12
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    Default super Foot

    myself i am still one of the old School, feet and inchs is much better,
    S/F 1 foot by 1 foot by 1 inch thick now 424 super foot is one cubic metre so you work that out, now if some one was lost and i was told that they were 5foot 9inchs tall i would know who to look for, but if i was told his hight in metric he would stay lost for ever. cheers,

  14. #13
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    Default imperial and metric..........

    i see a few people have correctly explained what a super foot is ...........i think around mid seventies we went metric ....and timber becam a cubic metre........here are a few mathematical equations i use when buying in superfeet from usa and converting .......we also buy in metric tons from india , but thats a whole different story.......

    ok in a cubic metre there is


    100metre of 200\50mmor 8\2 inch
    400metre of 100\25 or 4\1 inch

    im pretty sure there are 400 super feet per cubic metre......

    cheers


    rupert....www.woodworld.com.au

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    When I was going to tech in the early 50's I am sure in the theory exams was : that 12 superfeet = ?
    les

  16. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by les88 View Post
    When I was going to tech in the early 50's I am sure in the theory exams was : that 12 superfeet = ?
    les
    One cubic foot.

    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

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