There are three major hesitations in people’s minds related to solid wooden products:
Problem: |
Solution: |
Deformation:
Solid wood changing its shape due to changes on humidity and temperature. |
Lamination Technique:
Three properly selected layers of solid wood are adhered in opposite working directions. Thus, twisting tendencies of each plate "reset" each other.
|
 |
Special Glue and Mortise Joint:
Mortise joint used in Arbor products and special glue used in all joints secures all parts to each other and prevents movement.
|
Rotting:
Massive wood, in its natural form, is the main food of some bacteria, fungi and insects. Old fashioned paints, which form nonpermeable films, prevent breathing of wood but not rotting. |
Impregnation Process:
Eco-friendly impregnation materials used on Arbor products diffuse into wood and prevents bacteria, fungi and insects. |
|
Flexible Paint:
The surfaces of Arbor products are coated with a flexible paint. This special paint which does not prevent wood of breathing (emitting and inhaling humidity) responds to surfacial cracks on wood by stretching and therefore does not crack. Since extreme humidity and bacteria etc attack wood through cracks, this property is an important guard against rotting.
|
Cost:
Massive wood, being a valuable material, usually costs unaffordably high in the carpentry scale production due to excessive use of specialized labor. |
Industrial Production:
Arbor has totally mechanized its production processes. Savings through prevention of false production, unnecessary labor, recycling scraps and economies of scale are all reflected to the consumer. |
|
Long Service Life:
Since Arbor products have much longer life than their artificial alternatives, costs per unit time in use are much less than their apparent costs.
- Cost comparison must be made among equivalent products.-
Artificial Product
Arbor Product |