Q: I’m a remodeling contractor and have started to see a disturbing trend in the failure of treated lumber. I was hired to rebuild an outdoor stair railing that had a treated 4-by-4-inch post wrapped with redwood.
A vast majority of the bottom of the post rotted away and the post was very wet once I removed the redwood. The bolts were very corroded too. The post was less than 15 years old.
I was also called to raise back up an outdoor shed that was built on 6-by-6-inch treated lumber posts that were partially buried in the soil. It turns out termites had eaten the post! I thought the treatment process was supposed to deter insect attack. Do you have any insight, and knowing this, what would you do to create more permanent installations?
A: Whether you’re a remodeling contractor or a homeowner, you need to be very careful when it comes to treated lumber. A lot of people think that all treated lumber at the local home center or traditional lumber yard is the same.
That’s not true by a long shot.
A quick visit to the American Wood Protection Association website (awpa.com) will clear this matter up for you quickly.
As I write this column, there are no fewer than 12 different categories for treated lumber. Each one is given a specific category code such as UC1, UC2, all the way up to UCFB.
Untreated raw lumber from the forest is treated with different chemical brews at different concentrations to achieve a predetermined level of protection.
A good analogy might be winter jackets. You may put on a light puffer jacket if the outdoor temperature is in the mid-40s. But if Old Man Winter is in a foul mood and the wind is howling with a temperature of -10F, you might want to have on a Maine mountain parka.
It’s quite possible the treated lumber that in question was only rated for interior dry locations. Or, it could have been rated for outdoor use but was rated for rapid water runoff. Note that he said the post was wrapped in redwood so it stayed damp or was wet most of the time.
When you purchase treated lumber, it’s supposed to have a small plastic tag stapled to the end of the lumber. This tag should show the AWPA use category.
If I were using treated lumber outdoors and wanted maximum protection from rot and insects, I’d want the tag to say UC4C.
Much of the modern treated lumber has a very high concentration of copper in the wood. If you paid attention in high school chemistry class, you know that when you put copper and steel or iron in a beaker full of water, you start a chemical reaction that starts to corrode the iron or steel.
This is why it’s so very important to use bolts, nuts, nails, etc., with modern treated lumber that has the highest amount of corrosion resistance. The best would be stainless steel fasteners, but you’ll probably have to settle for double-dipped hot galvanized.
Some high-quality fasteners are sold with a corrosion-resistance scale printed on the box. Match the corrosion resistance to your application.
Deck collapse autopsies often reveal the cause to be corroded fasteners. If you couple this with poor framing practices and dubious structural construction methods, you can see why I never go onto a high deck before I inspect it first.
Just a little over a year ago, a friend of my daughter almost died in Puerto Rico because she stepped alone onto a small outdoor deck and it collapsed under her weight. She broke her neck in the fall and had to have her spleen removed.
Never trust an outdoor deck that’s more than 4 feet off the ground.
I have other issues with treated lumber. It may seem cynical to say so, but it’s possible that treated lumber really doesn’t have the protection the tag states is possible. Imagine these scenarios. What happens if the concentration of the brew on a given day at the factory is not what it’s supposed to be? What happens if there’s a failure in the gauges connected to the pressure vessels where the lumber is being pumped full of chemicals? What happens if the plant operator had a fight with his spouse or boss that morning? Yes, these are all very remote possibilities, but nothing is certain in this world except death and taxes, right? You do have other options in many cases when it comes to building things exposed to the weather.
Instead of using treated lumber, you can use metal.
The treated 4-by-4-inch post that the reader removed from the outdoor stair railing could have been a galvanized 4-by-4- inch metal tube. While the homeowner may not have liked the look, the railing system could have been aluminum.
It pays to talk with a contractor with at least 20 years of building experience in situations like this.
I’d also suggest talking with several, not just one, so you get a variety of opinions.
You would do yourself a favor by engaging your own critical thinking skills and ratcheting back your trust factor. Keep in mind that some marketing managers for products push the envelope on their product claims. For example, do you really believe in a lifetime warranty on roofing shingles?