The balsa wood has a solid volume that only consists of 40 of the entire tree.
Balsa is hardwood.
The green balsa wood is the one that contains five times more water by weight than the actual wood substance.
There are many more types of hardwood trees than there are softwood.
Strength and stiffness approximately 50 that of baltic pine pinus sylvestris.
Being a deciduous angiosperm balsa is classified as a hardwood despite the wood itself being very soft.
Broad leafed flowering trees are hardwoods.
Like balsa wood basswood is soft and lightweight.
White to oatmeal in colour with high silky lustre.
In fact balsa is the spanish word for raft.
The name balsa comes from the spanish word for raft.
The trees are harvested after six to 10 years of growth.
Balsa has excellent sound heat and vibration insulating properties and is also incredibly buoyant.
Balsa wood is the lightest and softest commercial hardwood timber.
Yet despite its softness balsa is technically classified as a hardwood rather than a softwood since it has broad leaves and is not a conifer.
It is the softest commercial hardwood.
Although the wood of a balsa tree is soft balsa is a hardwood.
The terms hardwood and softwood don t relate to the weight or density of the wood but to the tree type.
This wood is far from the other hardwood that you can see in the market since it has more water in it.
Hardwood trees are angiosperms mostly decidous in the northern hemisphere but evergreens in the southern hemisphere while softwoods are conifers.
However basswood is a hardwood.