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How Do You Stack Lumber?

4.4K views 36 replies 34 participants last post by  ScottM  
#1 · (Edited by Moderator)
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How do you stack lumber? Horizontally? Vertically?

Why?
 

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#2 ·
Horizontally, supported by edge framed melamine (3/4 in). I band (using shipping shrink wrap) wood bought from the same source at the same time and mark the shrink wrap with its information. I do it this way because it gets more wood out of the way, no sag.
 
#3 ·
Horizontally, and stickers if it's drying and then once it's stabilized, I store it vertically. I have a lot of large slabs and vertical makes it a lot easier to sort through and pick what I'm looking for as I'm doing different projects.

I do have a couple Portamate racks that I store wood that I buy in stores horizontal but that's only a small portion of my inventory.
 
#6 ·
Mine is usually on a pile on the floor, leaning in a corner, hanging from the rafters and stuffed into shelves…I even have some stored under the floorboards (no joke…UNDER the building…it's dry down there…)......when looking for a piece, the curse words float in the air like a bad cartoon…..nothing is organized…..not a thing…..
 
#9 ·
All my rough lumber is air-dried completely by the time I get it, so when I bring it home, it goes unstickers into a horizontal pile in the garage. I put several 1" spacers under the bottom layer to keep it off the garage floor. Once I find time, I skip-plane it all, and it goes back in a pile. When I get to the final jointing/planning step, the pieces are typically quite smaller, and I will stack and sticker those pieces for a few days before I continue on with them.
 
#11 ·
Most that I have stored in my shop is stored horizontally on a rack up high, because that's where I have room. Vertically would take up wall space that I can't give up. While drying, my other stuff is stacked and stickered in a barn loft with ratchet straps around it. I think everybody's got at least a little bit of what Sue's got going on.
 
#13 ·
Just reorganized the horizontal shelving to decrease/eliminate the board-on-the-bottom issue. We were given a bunch of trim (cherry, poplar, oak, mdo) by another woodworker that was cleaning shop (thanks, Andy!). Initially, had it on a few deep and wide shelves, now it is on multiple shallow (depth and height) shelves. Short stuff is still stacked on deep/wide shelves… it's a work in process.
 
#14 ·
Horizontally in the loft of my shop. Why? There's not enough room anywhere else. Shorter offcuts that are still usable are in horizontal gridwork between ceiling joists-out of the way, yet easily visible and accessible.
 
#17 ·
Stickered and horizontal for the most part. Have some shorter stuff vertical. Then there's a batch of walnut stickered and covered out side. Then there's another batch of 8/4 White oak that, if Sue came over to my shop, she'd feel right at home. Dang stuff is 8/4X 12"+ and 10' -12' long. Too heavy for me to lift to my racks, so it's on the floor of the shop. I just whack off a chunk as needed.
 
#21 ·
Both Horiz. & Vert. in garage/shop & even some in Pick-up camper shell!

Whatever is easiest at the time!

I think Vertical is the best… if I could do it more, I would… Space dictates which one…