Fighting Fastener Corrosion Jacksonville FL

Deck building used to be simpler. At the lumberyard, you’d load up on CCA-treated 2-by stock for the floor system, 6x6s for the posts, and whatever the budget allowed for the decking — anything from 1x6 pressure treated to more-expensive 1x4 Doug fir.

Grass Root Industries Inc
(904)390-3959
3947 Boulevard Center Drive
Jacksonville, FL
Guardian Pest Control Company
(904)396-2847
1322 Naldo Avenue
Jacksonville, FL
C & C Marble Designs
(904)731-5190
5105 Phillips Highway
Jacksonville, FL
Creative Greenery
(904)733-4384
5959 Saint Augustine Road
Jacksonville, FL
Nicolas Soria
Olumina Technologies LLC.

(904) 294-8166
5800 Beach blvd ste 203-257
Jacksonville, FL
Paradise Ponds
(904)731-1909
4407 Englewood Avenue
Jacksonville, FL
Greener Image
(904)739-8090
2071 Emerson Street
Jacksonville, FL
Victory Landscape Services Inc
(904)396-0900
2300 Jernigan Road
Jacksonville, FL
Brandy
DesignInside

904-487-1553
1724 Moro Ave
Jacksonville, FL
M & W Lawn Service Inc
(904)398-0027
3261 Phillips Highway
Jacksonville, FL

Fighting Fastener Corrosion

What’ll you have with that wood preservative: Hot-dip galvanized, polymer coated, or stainless steel?

by Jefferson Kolle



Deck building used to be simpler. At the lumberyard, you’d load up on CCA-treated 2-by stock for the floor system, 6x6s for the posts, and whatever the budget allowed for the decking — anything from 1x6 pressure treated to more-expensive 1x4 Doug fir. Buying hardware and fasteners was straightforward too. Inside the lumberyard, you’d load up on nails, nuts, bolts, screws, and maybe joist hangers. And you’d be good to go.

Buying lumber and fasteners is no longer so straightforward. Since CCA was withdrawn from the residential market in 2004, new preservatives have taken its place. The corrosiveness of some of these chemicals has in turn spawned new types of corrosion-resistant hardware, which have left deck builders wondering which ones work best and if the best ones are worth the money.

A Little Chemistry
According to Dr. Pascal Kamdem, professor of wood science and technology at Michigan State University, chromated copper arsenate (CCA) pressure-treated wood was phased out because European countries objected to the chromium, while concerns in the United States centered around the arsenic. “Chemical companies wanted a pressure-treating formula that would be acceptable worldwide, so they got rid of both objectionable chemicals.”

Click here to read full article from Deck Magaziner