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By 1930, wood wool cement boards were being widely produced.
It is also used for the production of cement-bonded wood wool boards.
Finally, wood wool can be dyed to produce a variety of colored products.
Wood wool of dry cooler pads can catch fire even by small sparks.
The wood has sometimes been used for wood wool and cooperage.
Due to its high volume and large surface area, wood wool can be used for applications where water or moisture retention is necessary.
Wood wool can be produced in either horizontal or vertical shredding machines.
Wood wool fibers can be compressed and when the pressure is removed they resume their initial volume.
(One suggested fiber was excelsior, which is also known as wood wool.)
The term wood wool is used in the United States to describe finer grades of excelsior.
European "wood wool" was known in America in the last nineteenth century as being distinctly different from excelsior.
Shredded aspen wood is used for packing and stuffing, sometimes called excelsior (wood wool).
The wood wool that is the topic of this article is what has traditionally been known as excelsior in the United States.
Common stuffing materials are synthetic fiber batting, cotton, straw, wood wool, plastic pellets or beans.
For example, the stimulation of the natural predator Dermaptera is done in gardens by hanging upside-down flowerpots filled with straw or wood wool.
When these fibers are bonded with cement or magnesite, bonded wood wool boards are produced.
Slabs of bonded wood wool are considered environmently friendly construction and insulation materials because they do not contain organic binders.
A terracotta flower pot hung upside-down, filled with bundles of straw or wood wool is an ideal house for earwigs.
Fibrenap, in its simplest form, comes as a roll of Kraft paper stuffed with wood wool and comes in a variety of widths.
Modern industry includes a plastic pipe moulding factory for Brett Martin plc.There was also a wood wool production unit on Staveley works.
In the beginning of the 20th century wood wool was used as a raw material for producing wood wool panels in Europe, especially in Austria.
In the United States the name wood wool is reserved for only a small proportion of the output consisting of certain special grades of extra thin and narrow stock."
The U.S. Standard Industrial Classification Index SIC is 2429 for the product "Wood wool (excelsior)".
The number 4405.00 is applied to wood wool by the World Customs Organization in the Harmonized Commodity Description and Coding System (HS).
Another application of this product was use in sanitary towels, as shown in advertisements from 1885-1892 in Britain for "wood wool diapers" or "sanitary wood wool sheets".