Standard (timber unit)

[3][4] The standard hundred of the Russian capital of Saint Petersburg was 120 boards which were 12 feet long, 11⁄2 inches thick and 11 inches wide – a volume of 165 cubic feet.

[3] The Swedish standard hundred was 121 boards of 14 feet long, 3 inches thick and 9 inches wide, making 317.625 cubic feet.

[5] The British standard hundred for battens was 120 battens of 12 feet long, 21⁄2 inches thick and 7 inches wide, making 175 cubic feet.

[9] The deals for decking sold in the ports of Danzig and Memel were planks of 40 feet long, 3 inches thick and 1 foot wide.

North America replaced Scandinavia as a source and the annual volume of trade in standards during this period changed as follows (standards per year):[10] This article about forestry is a stub.

Proposed 1920 logship "composed of fifteen hundred standards, of which twelve hundred would be the cargo proper and three hundred the structure and binding frames."