George Vondriska

Red vs White Oak: How to Identify the Difference

George Vondriska
Duration:   1  mins

Description

Red oak and white oak are in the same family, but have very different characteristics. Unfortunately simply looking at the boards may not give you enough information to tell the difference between the two. And no, looking at the color of the boards won’t do it. Red oak isn’t really red, and white oak isn’t really white.

Tyloses to the Rescue!

Here’s the solution to the red vs white question. Cut a thin section off the end of the board and have a close look at it. The end grain of red oak is very porous. The end grain of white oak, not so much. You may be able to see the difference with the naked eye, but holding the pieces up to a light makes it easy to see the difference. Red oak looks like an open honeycomb, with light filtering through. You can’t see light through white oak. That’s because the pores of white oak are filled with tyloses. When you do this test make sure the pores aren’t simply filled with sawdust, which could make red oak look like white oak. And, cut your sample from the heartwood, not sapwood, of the board. Sapwood inherently has fewer tyloses than heartwood.

What else do we get from tyloses?

You may already know that white oak is a better choice than red oak for outdoor projects. That’s because tyloses are sealing up those pores so the wood can’t wick up water. And, being close grained, white oak is a great choice for things you don’t want to leak, like boats and whiskey barrels.

Want to know about the medium you’re working with all the time? Check out more videos on understanding wood. And you’re sure to get a lot from our helpful shop tips, too.

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6 Responses to “Red vs White Oak: How to Identify the Difference”

  1. craigt55

    Use the same pieces and a blowgun. Blow air thru them. Also, if they sit for a while white oak will oxadise and turn yellow.

  2. Christian

    Thanks for the information. It is interesting to understand the properties of the wood and is usage. I read you can identify the two oaks by the size of the shiny veins they have RED have small ones and WHITE have large ones. Of course in some limit case we need an other way :)

  3. Don

    It would be hard to take a electric miter saw to the lumber yard.

  4. Alan Garrenton

    If you really want a cool science experiment, cut off a piece of each oak about 3 inches long and put one end in a glass of water and blow on the other end. The red oak will show bubbles in the water because your breath is traveling through the open pores.

  5. Duane Cocking

    Cut a short piece of each, put the end of each piece, one at a time, in a glass of water. If you can blow bubbles through it it is Red Oak. If not it's White Oak.

  6. Roger

    Thankyou so much for such an easy and simple way to distinguish from white to red oak

I have, in my hot little hands, a piece of White Oak and a piece of Red Oak. And they're both obviously in the same Oak family. And one of the things I get asked a bunch of times is, how can I tell the difference between the two? This is a pretty cool science experiment. Let me show you what I have. What I did is I took these pieces to the miter saw and I cut really thin sections off the end. I'll show those to you in just a second. What we want to do is look through the really thin cross sections and then we're going to know what's what. I have them mounted on a little light fixture here, borrowed from the video crew. And when you look at this, both of these cross sections are the same thickness. This is Red Oak, this is White Oak. So when you're identifying this, it's the honeycomb that gives away the Red Oak. The White Oak is solid. What do we use White Oak for? Making barrels. Why? Because Red Oak would leak like a colander. So it's a real simple, but dramatic test you can do, if you've got the two pieces or if you've got one piece and you want to know what it is. The cross sections we're talking about, need to be thin enough that you can see through them if possible. So get a good thin cross section off the end grain of the piece, hold it up to the light, have a look at it, see what you got. If it's all honeycombed, it's Red Oak. If you cannot see through it, it's a White Oak.
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