In the birch plywood inspection industry, edge quality issues refer to defects that just meet the critical value of national standards or customer specifications, a vague area where products can be judged either qualified or unqualified, which is the most controversial point in trade and quality inspection. This paper clarifies common edge scenarios, judgment basis and practical methods from six aspects.
1. Appearance: Birch veneer grade-related defects like slight color difference (within 5% of standard), tiny surface cracks (≤0.3mm width, ≤20mm length) and minor knot holes (≤2mm diameter) are edge cases. Inspectors judge by comparing with veneer grade standards (A/B/C/D grade) and customer requirements.
2. Physical and Chemical Properties: Bonding strength (slightly lower than 1.2MPa standard but ≥1.1MPa) and moisture content (8%-14% standard, 7.8% or 14.2%) are critical. It depends on whether the deviation affects long-term use.
3. Specifications: Thickness tolerance (±0.3mm standard, ±0.35mm), panel size deviation (≤1mm/m) and flatness (≤0.2mm/1000mm) are edge cases, related to processing precision.
4. Process: Slight veneer overlapping (≤1mm width), uneven hot-pressing (local temperature difference ≤5℃) and incomplete edge sealing (≤3mm length) are controversial, depending on process standards.
5. Inspectors’ Experience & Subjective/Objective Factors: Objective factors like light and environment affect judgment; subjective factors include inspectors’ familiarity with standards. Experienced inspectors focus on defect impact rather than just data.
6. Customer Requirements: Different customers have different grade demands—high-end customers (A-grade veneer) may reject slight color difference, while ordinary customers (B/C-grade) may accept it, leading to different judgments for the same plywood.
