How It's Made - Chipboard Office Furniture

How It's Made - Chipboard Office Furniture

How is Particle Board Made?

Raw Materials and Initial Processing

  • The production of particle board begins with lumbermill leftovers, primarily sawdust, wood shavings, and wood chips from various types of lumber.
  • These materials are processed in a large mill that functions like a food processor, chopping them into particles ranging from 0.2 to 5 millimeters in size and less than 0.7 millimeters thick.
  • To achieve uniform humidity levels, the particles are placed in giant dryers powered by leftover dust from the milling process; this reduces humidity to 1.5% within 15 to 25 minutes.

Particle Separation and Glue Preparation

  • After drying, a screening machine separates the particles by size; larger pieces are used for the core layer while smaller ones form the smoother surface layer.
  • Concurrently, the glue department mixes resin, water, wax, and chemical hardeners to prepare for binding the particles together.

Forming Master Boards

  • Machines mix glue with particles to create a continuous mat which is then compressed to remove air before being pressed hot to activate the glue.
  • Once formed into large sheets called master boards, they cool for about half an hour before being sanded down for finishing.

Lamination Process at Furniture Factory

  • At the furniture factory, master boards undergo lamination where a glue spreader applies adhesive followed by decorative paper strips fortified with resin varnish.
  • A blade cuts between each board after stacking them in preparation for cutting; saw machines can cut through multiple boards simultaneously based on thickness.

Final Assembly Preparation

  • Edges of particle boards are covered with PVC plastic strips that match laminate colors; these edges are glued and trimmed for neatness.
Video description

On this episode of How It's Made, we learn all about the manufacturing process that goes into making chipboard office furniture.