Wood floor vents
  Flush mount floor registers
  Self rimming floor vents
  Baseboard diffusers
  Heating floor vents
   
Wood wall vents
  Side wall vents
  Cold air return vents
  Wood air vents
  Wood wall vents
  Wood air grills
  Wood air registers
  Wood wall registers
  Round air diffusers
   
Wood gable vents
  Round gable vents
  Half round gable vents
  Square gable vents
  Rectangle gable vents
  Diamond gable vents
  Triangle gable vents
  Right triangle gable vents
  Five side gable vents
  Tombstone gable vents
  Oval gable vents
  Octagonal gable vents
   
           
  Hickory floor register
 
   
hickory floor register
floor register
 
    Available size:  
    2x10", 2x12", 2x14", 3x10", 4x10", 4x12", 4x14", 6x10", 6x12", 6x14"  
    Custom sizes are available upon request.  
    Easy sliding metal damper is also available for all the above sizes.  
 
 
  More information on Hickory  
    Hickory floor vents, hickory floor registers  
       
   

Its name is an English contraction of the Native American "powcohicora." In Eastern North America, it survived the catastrophic changes of the Glacial Epoch, some 50 million years ago. Thus, it is the first strictly American hardwood species. Westward trekking pioneers made hickory a prerequisite for their wagon wheels. Later, the Wright Brothers whittled hickory for their "flying contraption." Hickory sawdust and chips are used to flavor meat by smoking. Commercially, the pecan is the most important native North American nut tree and it is the state tree of Texas. Pecan was a Native American name given to any nut hard enough to require cracking with a stone. Native Americans, particularly in the Northeast, used hickory for their bows.

Where it Grows
Eastern U.S., principal commercial areas: Central and Southern states. Tree height ranges from 60 to 120 feet. Hickories grow slowly and it is not unusual for a tree to take 200 years to mature.

Main Uses
Tool handles, furniture, cabinetry, flooring, paneling, wooden ladders, dowels and sporting goods.

General Description
The hickories are an important group within the Eastern hardwood forests. Botanically they are split into two groups; the true hickories, and the pecan hickories (fruit bearing). The wood is virtually the same for both and is usually sold together. Hickory is the hardest, heaviest and strongest American wood. The sapwood of hickory is white, tinged with inconspicuous fine brown lines while the heartwood is pale to reddish brown. Both are coarse-textured and the grain is fine, usually straight but can be wavy or irregular.

Working Properties
The heaviest of American hardwoods, the hickories can be difficult to machine and glue, and are very hard to work with hand tools, so care is needed. They hold nails and screws well, but there is a tendency to split so pre-boring is advised. The wood can be sanded to a good finish. The grain pattern welcomes a full range of medium-to-dark finishes and bleaching treatments. It can be difficult to dry and has high shrinkage.

Physical Properties
The density and strength of the hickories will vary according to the rate of growth, with the true hickories generally showing higher values than the pecan hickories. The wood is well-known for its very good strength and shock resistance and it also has excellent steam-bending properties. Extremely tough and resilient, even texture, quite hard and only moderately heavy.

 
 
  You may also be interested in the following floor registers  
   
 
   
 
     
 
 
 
Manufacturer of floor vents, supplier of wood vents, exporter of air vents, floor registers sources
 
 
Copyright 2009-2012, WELLAND INDUSTRIES LLC. All rights reserved.