Really Good Show
The 2014 Timber Processing & Energy Expo reflected an industry in an upgrade mode.
“This has been the best show we’ve ever been to in the company’s history,” said Joey Nelson, president of Washington-based scanner manufacturer JoeScan.
JoeScan was one of 167 companies to exhibit at the Timber Processing & Energy Expo (TP&EE) held October 15-17, 2014 at the Portland Exposition Center. The event catered to the lumber, veneer/plywood and engineered wood products primary manufacturing industries.
Indeed non-exhibitor registration (mostly mill company and mill operations personnel) increased to 1,700, up tremendously compared to the event two years ago, which was the inaugural TP&EE as produced by Hatton-Brown Expositions and hosted by Timber Processing, Panel World and Wood Bioenergy magazines. In addition, more than 1,000 exhibitor personnel were on hand.
Donnell says the jump in attendance from two years ago makes perfect sense. “We thought it was good attendance in 2012, especially for our first show, and there were some positive signs in the economy then. But certainly the industry has become even more upbeat in the past two years, as evidenced by the tremendous amount of project business that was going on at TP&EE this time.”
The exhibitor hall was a tight sell-out, an adjacent corridor just off the main floor was packed with exhibitors, and several exhibitors set up tents and machinery on the outside lot in front of the hall.
“There was no room to spare,” Donnell adds, noting that exhibitors purchased more than 47,000 sq. ft. of space. “We had a waiting list of probably 30 companies who did not get to exhibit. That’s a good problem to have as they say, but we don’t like the thought of somebody not being able to get in.”
As a result, Donnell says the show organizers are considering moving the exhibit to an adjacent hall at the Portland Expo Center. It would offer a third more space. “Given the waiting list, and also that many exhibitors have indicated they want to increase their space at the next TP&EE in 2016, we certainly have to take a serious look at it.”
Donnell says specific dates haven’t been set for 2016, but the event will be held during the first half of October again.
For JoeScan’s Nelson, the company’s growth in the past year, the introduction of its next generation scanner (JS-25), combined with the overall positive business climate in the industry made for a vibrant TP&EE.
Jesse Vigil, president of Metal Detectors Inc., said it was a very positive feeling on the show floor and they’re looking forward to the coming year. Vigil said they made numerous contacts who were interested in MDI’s top-of-the-line TWA metal detector.
Mike Cloutier, principal at Cut Technologies, said they received tremendous interest in their filing equipment and saws. “The mills are really concentrating on the filing rooms, looking at kerf reduction, and investing in automation to address the labor situation in the filing room. We see some big sales coming forward,” Cloutier said.
Russell Barratt, longtime specialist with Simonds International, said all of their cutting tools plants, knife and saw, are running flat out. Barratt added, however, they are concerned about raw material, noting the dependence on imported raw materials, and potential related problems in the shipping industry and in container ports. “Simonds is working hard to bring new raw materials into the mix,” Barratt said. “We think that’s important not just as a company but as an industry. Our customers need to think about having the cutting tools on hand to run their business.”
Sonia Perrine, senior marketing associate at USNR, praised the abundance of traffic. “The industry is coming alive,” Perrine said. Interest in USNR products at the show’s largest exhibit was huge, such as the ElectraTong lug loader. “We also have some unique mobile interfaces that are revolutionizing the industry, with iPhones and iPads being able to check machine status, activate sorter bins and other activities, which is safer and more convenient,” she said.
Gero Springer, CEO Springer-MiCROTEC, noted the company has opened a sales and service office in Vancouver, British Columbia, which he is directing on-site. “The show has been awesome,” Springer said. “It passed really quickly because the interest was so high in our E-Cut trimmer, CT.LOG scanner and other systems. I think everyone was in a good investing mood and thinking about upgrades and some of them thinking about new mills.”
Sawmill personnel came from throughout the U.S., Canada and overseas, many of them simply taking in the latest technologies, and others who were more specific with their intentions.
John Gunter, maintenance supervisor at Blue North Forest Products, Kamiah, Idaho, commented that they’re working specifically on their sorter and stacker line. But they’re always on the lookout for “more knowledge, more technology, more speed, more recovery. This is the place to be for that.”
Jim Benton, head saw filer at Deer Park Lumber, Tunkhannock, Pa., said they’re upgrading their filing room and in particular looking for a profile grinder for their band saws and Stellite tipping conversions. “It’s one stop shopping here,” he added.
Willy Kalesnikoff, project manager with Kalesnikoff Lumber, Castlegar, BC, “came down to kick some tires, but mainly looking for new innovations and new ideas on saw filing and ways to cut wood.” He pointed to a new heat sensor for planers. “We haven’t seen that before. This is the place to find it.”
Terry Lamers, manager with Lamars Forest, Dallas, Ore., added, “I like the technology here. Some of it is like science fiction. Some people still think that sawmills are old school. They’re completely wrong.”
A frequent topic of conversation was the large number of independent southern pine operations selling to Canadian lumber corporations. Many exhibitors said they hated to see some of the family operations disappear, but they welcomed what they anticipate will be upgrade projects at many of those recently purchased sawmills.
Also participating was Oregon State Rep. Dennis Richardson, a candidate for governor of Oregon. He spoke the first morning at the plywood manufacturing workshop on critical issues facing the Northwest forest products industry. Afterward he made the rounds on the show floor, and commented, “I understand that timber is to Oregon what corn is to Iowa. It is our legacy.” Richardson said the current government leadership has a policy of continued restraint of utilization of natural resources, while he favors a rational approach with a timber policy that will be good for economics as well as the environment.”
Workshops
About 150 people sat in on some of the workshop sessions. The first day featured presentations on technologies and issues in veneer, plywood and engineered lumber manufacturing. The second day featured the Lumber Manufacturing Workshop, in which 25 speakers participated, addressing saw filing and sawing performance, scanning and optimization, and sawmill operations and quality control.
Equipment maintenance and troubleshooting as it relates to lumber quality highlighted a presentation from USNR’s Joe Shields, support technician with more than 40 years of experience troubleshooting electrical and mechanical systems.
The keys to preventive maintenance, Shields emphasized, are understanding life cycles and the need for replacement parts as related to machine performance; regular output measurements to chart performance over a maintenance cycle; and having procedures in place to perform and confirm proper machine alignment.
Shields noted that to optimize performance it’s important to establish baseline measurements for “normal” conditions when the machine is running well, with items such as run times, saw changes, sawing variation, oil and water consumption and air and mechanical pressures. Working with the filing staff to keep track of kerf and kerf reduction as it relates to lumber sizes is also very important, he added.
Shields related a preventive maintenance and troubleshooting approach for managers who find themselves in a familiar position: “Don’t become a referee between the filers, millwrights and operators,” he said. “Instead, put a procedure in place where everyone documents a problem within their area of expertise. Don’t let an electrician say it’s a mechanical problem.”
By minimizing finger-pointing and focusing your personnel on their own inputs and outputs, shortcomings and solutions many times become readily apparent, Shields said.
An interesting presentation from Bryan Beck, senior consultant with The Beck Group, looked at characteristics of top-performing mills.
Beck noted that the top quartile performing operations typically achieve profit margins that are more than double those achieved by the average operation during “good” markets, and these same operations normally continue to stay profitable during poor markets when most operations are experiencing losses.
In the top 25% of mills studied and ranked by EBITA profitability, top-performing mills in the South have a 4:1 advantage over competitors, Beck noted. In the West, the top 25% of mill performers have a 2:1 edge over competitors in profitability, he added.
“Management is the top area of differentiation” in determining profitability and success, Beck said. “Effective leaders have a clear plan and objective, a plan of execution and create teams while building expertise in-house.”
The best managers are always looking to improve and always looking for areas of opportunity within mill operations and machine efficiency, Beck said, noting that effective managers are also good about sharing operating information with employees, especially in areas that the employees have control over.
Terry Brown, director of the Lumber Quality Institute, noted that as a rule of thumb, for every .010 reduction in size, there’s a .6% recovery increase in yield, which makes sawing performance and meeting lumber sizing goals with respect to shrinkage in drying and allowance for planning critical points in lumber manufacturing.
“The nature of log density means lumber shrinkage is widely variable, even within the same log,” Brown said. Real-time QC and lumber measurement systems allow personnel to get much more data on machine performance than with traditional, manual measuring systems, he added.
“The QC guy doesn’t need to measure lumber eight hours a day,” Brown said. “He needs to be freed up to do more analytical work and identify opportunities.”
Andrew Smith, director of Trajectre, spoke about proactive drivers of quality control. He traced the evolution of quality control and noted the introduction of statistical sampling in the 1930s, statistical process control in the 1960s and quality management philosophies in more recent years such as TPM, TQM, 6 Sigma, Lean and TMS. He also followed it in the lumber industry, including real-time size measurement and saw vibration analysis.
Smith defined quality as “a comparison of the output to the desired result,” and quality management as “minimizing or eliminating all waste (time, material, cost) associated with producing the desired result.”
He discussed types of quality issues in sawmills and the implementation of quality metrics, and the importance of employee ownership in the quality control program.
It’s Showtime! The 2014 Timber Processing & Energy Expo Opens Its Doors
The 2014 edition of the Timber Processing & Energy Expo opens its doors this morning to primary producers of lumber, panels, engineered wood products and wood energy. More than 160 exhibitors are participating in Hall D of the Portland Exposition Center in Portland, Oregon.
Those wishing to attend can register on-site for the event, which is hosted by Timber Processing, Panel World and Wood Bioenergy magazines.
Portland Exposition Center
The Portland Exposition Center is located at:
2060 North Marine Drive
Portland, Oregon 97217
Daily shuttle service is available and will run between the Red Lion On The River, Oxford Suites and Holiday Inn Express hotels and the expo center. Parking is available at the Portland Expo Center for $8.00 per day. A parking pass may be purchased for the duration of the event for $21.00.
Show Hours
Wednesday, October 15th – 9:00am to 5:00pm
Thursday, October 16th – 9:00am to 5:00pm
Friday, October 17th – 9:00am to 3:00pm
Daily Video Broadcasts
Don’t forget to tune in to our daily video broadcast reports!
HB Media, an affiliate of show producer Hatton-Brown Expositions LLC, will produce and air a short video broadcast each afternoon of the event at 2:00pmPT/4:00pmCT/5:00pmET. The broadcasts will include video of the expo floor and interviews with exhibitors and attendees.
If you have any questions regarding TP&EE or for more information contact Show Manager Dianne Sullivan by e-mail: dianne@hattonbrown.com
Daily Video Broadcasts Planned For Upcoming TP&EE

Organizers of the upcoming Timber Processing & Energy Expo have announced that a daily video broadcast report will be aired from the event each afternoon.
TP&EE is scheduled October 15-17, 2014 at the Portland Exposition Center in Portland, Oregon. More than 160 exhibitors will be in attendance to display their technologies and services to primary producers of lumber, engineered wood products, panels and wood energy.
HB Media, an affiliate of show producer Hatton-Brown Expositions LLC, will produce and air a short video broadcast each afternoon of the event at 2:00pmPT/4:00pmCT/5:00pmET. The broadcasts will include video of the expo floor and interviews with exhibitors and attendees.
TP&EE Workshops Offer Big Bang For The Buck

“It’s the best deal you’ll ever get on workshops exclusive to lumber and plywood manufacturing,” says Rich Donnell, show director of the Timber Processing & Energy Expo (TP&EE), which will be held October 15-17, 2014 at the Portland Exposition Center in Portland, Ore.
Donnell, who is also the editor-in-chief of Timber Processing and Panel World magazines, says 36 industry professionals will deliver presentations during the Lumber Manufacturing Workshop on Thursday, October 16, and the Veneer & Plywood Manufacturing and Engineered Lumber Workshop on Wednesday, October 15. Both workshops will be held in the meeting rooms above the expo floor in Hall D.
“One registration fee of $75 gets you admission to both workshops, or which ever parts of the workshops you want to attend,” Donnell says. “You also get admission to the expo floor for three days and a ‘beer and brat ticket.’ You really can’t beat this deal, considering the valuable information that will be presented.”
The Lumber Manufacturing Workshop on Thursday, October 16, will include three interactive presentations on saw filing & sawing performance; seven presentations on scanning & optimization; and nine presentations on sawmill operations and quality control.
The Veneer & Plywood Workshop on Wednesday, October 15, will include sessions on challenges faced by veneer based producers; achieving successes at a modern green veneer production operation; several sessions on peeling, drying and grading technology developments; and a panel discussion on meeting customer needs.
An afternoon session will cover developments and technologies in Cross Laminated Timber.
Candidate for governor of Oregon, House Rep. Dennis Richardson will lead off the Veneer & Plywood Workshop with a talk on critical issues for the northwest forest products industry.
TP&EE Names Speakers For Veneer & Plywood, Engineered Lumber Workshop

The Timber Processing & Energy Expo will include a day-long workshop on Veneer & Plywood Manufacturing and Engineered Lumber to be held the first day of the expo, Wednesday, October 15, 2014, in the meeting rooms above the expo floor at the Portland Exposition Center in Portland, Ore.
TP&EE will be held October 15-17. More than 160 exhibitors have filled the Hall D venue at the Expo Center for the event, which will cater to primary producers of veneer, plywood, engineered wood products, lumber and wood energy.
The workshop kicks off with a speech by Republican House Representative Dennis Richardson, who is a candidate for governor of Oregon, running on a platform for business improvements and the creation of jobs. Richardson is a retired lawyer, business owner and Vietnam War veteran pilot from Central Point, Ore. He is serving his sixth term in the Oregon House of Representatives.
“My goal is to benefit the entire state in a way that will restore the pioneer legacy for our children and grandchildren—a legacy of good jobs for Oregon workers…and an effective, rational policy for efficiently managing our natural and human resources with respect for our quality of life and the environment,” Richardson says.
Richardson is opposing incumbent Democratic Governor John Kitzhaber.
Richardson’s opening talk is entitled, “Critical Issues for the Northwest Forest Products Industry.”
The Wednesday workshop includes presentations on a range of manufacturing processes, as well as an afternoon panel session on cross laminated timber.
Among the speakers are Dick Baldwin, operating partner with New Wood Resources and Atlas Holdings; Scott Weatherford, president of ATCO Wood Products.
The CLT discussion includes presentations from representatives of Weinig and MINDA.
Other presentations will address Turnkey Plywood Plant Technology; Veneer Grading; Veneer Drying; and Lathe Scanning Technology.
And end-of-day panel discussion will address “Meeting Customer Needs,” and include Chris Seymour, Region Manager-Western Oregon Region, Boise Cascade, as moderator.
On the second day of the expo, Thursday, October 16, the Lumber Manufacturing Workshop will be held. A fee of $75 includes access to both workshops, as well as admission for three days to the expo floor, and a free “beer and brat” ticket.
Speakers Announced For Lumber Manufacturing Workshop During TP&EE In Portland

Organizers of the 2014 Timber Processing & Energy Expo, which will be held October 15-17 at the Portland Exposition Center in Portland, Ore., have announced the list of speakers and presentations for the Lumber Manufacturing Workshop, which will be held Thursday October 16 at the Expo Center.
The Lumber Manufacturing Workshop will include 17 presentations under three categories: Saw Filing & Sawing Performance; Scanning & Optimization; and Sawmill Operations & Quality Control.
The cost of the Lumber Manufacturing Workshop is only $75, and includes three-day admittance to the expo floor and a “beer and brat” ticket.
TP&EE hosted 162 exhibitor companies and more than 1,000 attendees from 115 forest products companies and 200 specific mill site operations in 2012. The Workshop Day attracted more than 200 in 2012.
TP&EE is hosted by Timber Processing, Panel World and Wood Bioenergy magazines.
In addition to the Lumber Manufacturing Workshop, a Veneer-Based Manufacturing Workshop will be held on Wednesday, October 15 at the Portland Expo Center. The lineup for the Veneer-Based Manufacturing Workshop will be announced soon.
Following is the list of presenters for the Lumber Manufacturing Workshop on October 16. Specific presentation times will be announced later.
Saw Filing & Sawing Performance
An Interactive Session on Small Diameter Saw Design and Optimization
—Norm Brown, WUSA Sales Manager; Dave Purinton, North American Sales Manager, Simonds International
Saw Shop/Filing Room Safety, Automation & Saw Guides
—Allen Hewitt, Sales Manager; Justin Williams, CEO; Williams & White Equipment
Improve Recovery with Optical Precision Alignment
—Thomas Strenge, Technical Services Business Unit Manager; Steve Addington, Precision Alignment Specialist, Brunson Instrument
Scanning & Optimization
Latest Advancements in Grade Optimization and Quality Control Tools
—Ofer Heyman, Director of Operations; Christopher Rollins, Scanner Specialist, Lucidyne Technologies, Inc.
Selecting Appropriate Scan Heads: What Every Sawmill Needs to Consider
—Joey Nelson, President, JoeScan
Revolutionary Grade Optimization in the Bucking and Sawing Process
— Norvin Laudon, CTO, MiCROTEC North America
Linear Lumber Grading Scanner
—Jean Berube, President, VAB Solutions
Full Log Load Scanning and Measurement
—Mario Angel, Regional Manager, Woodtech-North America
Optimization: From Green End To Planer Mill
—Gale Miller, Southeastern Sales Manager, Autolog
Sawmill Operations & Quality Control
Understanding Key Criteria Impacting on Sawing, Positioning, Feeding and Scanning Accuracies
—Joe Shields, Machinery Support Technician, USNR
Characteristics of Top Performing Wood Products Operations
—Bryan Beck, Senior Consultant, The Beck Group
Keep It Going with Better Motion Control Tools
—Peter Nachtwey, President, Delta Computer Systems, Inc.
Lumber Quality Control: Executing and Improving Your Size Control Program
—Terry Brown, Director, Lumber Quality Institute; Nick Barrett, Partner, SiCam System
Optimize Your Production Plan…Optimize Your Optimizers
—Brad Turner, Principal; Alex Rapoport, Principal, HALCO Software Systems Ltd.
Processing Strategies for Maximum Added Value
—Norbert Ott, Sales Engineer, Linck
Proactive Drivers of Quality Control
—Andrew Smith, Director, Trajectre LLC
Supervisor Performance at the Highest Levels
—Robert Landau, Director of Operations, Pöyry Management Consulting
The cost of the Lumber Manufacturing Workshop is only $75, and includes three-day admittance to the expo floor and a “beer and brat” ticket.
Those not wishing to attend the workshop can register for free to walk the show floor, or pay $15 to walk the floor and also receive a “beer and brat” ticket.
Timber Processing & Energy Expo Expects An Even Better Event In 2014
We happily announce that the Timber Processing and Energy Expo will be held October 15-17, 2014 at the Portland Metropolitan Exposition Center in Portland, Oregon. Following this event in 2012, our post-event survey revealed an overwhelming majority of exhibitors in favor of continuing the expo at the Portland Expo Center and of again holding it in the month of October.
If you’ll recall, our organization, Hatton-Brown Publishers and its affiliate, Hatton-Brown Expositions, jumped in to produce TP&EE at the request of many forest products industry professionals who wanted us “to give it a shot” because of our longstanding relationships with the lumber, panel and energy industries through our magazines, Timber Processing, Panel World and Wood Bioenergy.
The 2012 event included 162 exhibitor companies that used up 43,000 square feet to display and demonstrate their machinery, technologies and supplies. More than 1,000 attendees from 115 forest products producing companies and 200 specific mill site operations visited TP&EE. They came from 30 U.S. states, five Canadian provinces and several overseas countries.
The combined attendee and exhibitor attendance of approximately 2,000 was buoyed by a brightening economy and pent-up demand for forest products mill improvements. Since then, improving housing markets and forest products demand has continued to boost industry confidence, and we’re confident this momentum will carry right into our 2014 event.
Our event also featured a Workshop Day, in which more than 200 people attended any of the 16 seminars that covered technologies in sawmills, panel mills and wood energy plants.
TP&EE will again be held in Hall D, which encompasses 72,000 square feet inside, and an abundance of outdoor space as well. The overall Expo Center sits on 60 acres and includes five halls with 330,000 square feet.
Portland Expo Center is conveniently located off Interstate 5 between downtown Portland and Vancouver, Washington. It’s only minutes from the Portland International Airport and has immediate access to the Max Light Rail.
We look forward to either your continued participation or your initial experience at TP&EE.
REALLY GOOD SHOW
The first Timber Processing & Energy Expo in Portland, Ore. delivers excited visitors and exhibitors.

More than 1,000 attendees—including representatives from 115 wood products producing companies and 200 specific mill site operations—from 30 U.S. states and five Canadian provinces traveled to the first Timber Processing & Energy Expo and brought with them a display of optimism that has long been missing in the industry.
One-hundred sixty-two (162) exhibitor companies used up 43,000 square feet of the Portland Exposition Center to display and demonstrate their machinery, technologies, supplies and services to mill company personnel during October 17-19.
The combined attendee and exhibitor attendance of approximately 2,000 was buoyed by a brightening economy and pent-up demand for forest products mill improvements.
The event focused on the sawmill, panel mill and wood energy sectors of the forest products industry. Timber Processing, Panel World and Wood Bioenergy served as media hosts, for the event, which was produced by Hatton-Brown Expositions LLC.
The event also featured a Workshop Day, in which more than 200 people attended any of the 16 seminars that covered sawmill scanning and optimization, machinery alignment, wood dust issues, veneer lathe and dryer technologies and opportunities for biomass utilization.
Comfortable temperatures and sunshine throughout most of the event also lifted the spirits of showgoers, who have suffered through one of the worst economic downturns ever, accentuated by a severe drop in housing starts during past several years.
Show Director Rich Donnell says one of the most positive comments he heard about the event was from an exhibitor who said he hadn’t seen such geographical representation at a machinery expo in many years.
“Obviously the show drew heavily from the immediate Northwest,” Donnell says. “But some important personnel from important companies came in from all around the country.”
Donnell also says he was very pleased that exhibitors and attendees for the most part had high praise for the Portland Expo Center as the location of the event.
Keith Robertson, international business manager for KDS Windsor, said that in comparing TP&EE to the many trade shows he’s recently visited around the world, “This is the best one we’ve been to in four or five years.”
With a North American office in Etowah, NC, KDS Windsor helped introduce continuous dry kilns in the South, and Robertson believes there’s an opportunity in the Northwest U.S. and Canadian markets as well. To that end, he commented, “We have a really good volume of people coming through and some fascinating inquiries.”
Josh Krause with LogPro and Baxley Equipment said the TP&EE event surpassed his expectations. “The show has been really productive for us, and we’ve had lots of people coming through wanting information.” Adding that company officials now wish they had brought more equipment to display, Krause added, “We’ve been really busy the past two years, and it looks like we’re going to get busier.”
David Boyd of Opticom Technologies, a supplier of mill environment cameras and monitor systems with 20,000 cameras in the field, said that “It’s been a great show, and the quality and number of people here have been way over my expectations. It’s amazing the number of people we’ve seen that we either already do business with or want to do business with.”
Opticom Technologies’ products are carried by Platt Electric Supply, a major vendor of mill electrical and electronic systems and components. Platt’s Brian Casey noted the company had a great show and garnered plenty of leads. “We had a very meaningful experience here,” he said, adding that Platt would be looking to get a larger booth in the future.
At the booth of saw arbor system supplier Vancouver Gear Works, David Manders claimed he was having “an excellent show. We’ve seen everyone from saw filers to mill managers to head filers. It was well worth coming here.”
JoeScan’s Joey Nelson said he liked TP&EE’s location at the Portland Expo Center, with easy access. “We also saw a good quality of visitor, and there are a lot of people looking at doing mill projects,” Nelson said, adding that the show provided his company with an opportunity to increase brand name recognition.
Jesse Vigil of MDI (Metal Detectors, Inc.) said the show “was good for us. We sold a system, got some good leads—and having the opportunity to talk to our customers is always a big part of these events.”
Sering Sawmill’s Ryan Perry said it was great to once again have a trade show in the Pacific Northwest—but he was really surprised at how many visitors he saw who were from other regions. “We got to meet a lot of new prospects, and getting a chance to network with other companies was also good,” he said.
USNR’s Paul Strebig demonstrated the company’s new TransLineator board feeding system with Micro-Gapping. The process uses angled rolls to move boards from transversely to lineally through a planer or other processing machine and back to transversely. Striebek says it’s a space-saving design while at the same time speeding up the line.
USNR featured a tremendous range of technologies at its display, which was the largest on the floor. The company also maintained a hospitality tent in the outdoor exhibits area.
Arrow Speed Controls parked its Mitsubishi electric automation mobile truck in the outdoor lot, displaying, PLCs, VFDs, servos and a robot inside the truck. The company also provided food and beverages for visitors throughout the show.
Ludwig Fleischhackl of Microtec discussed the company’s CT.LOG computer tomography technology for seeing the inside defects of logs. “It designs the cutting pattern according to internal defects,” he says. “This is revolutionary in the sawmill industry. As soon as the first installation is successful this will be the technology for the future.”
Many of the primary equipment manufacturers in the panel industries exhibited their technologies. USNR reported that RoyOMartin’s southern pine plywood plant in Chopin, La. is starting up a six-deck jet dryer. The dryer was constructed adjacent the line where it went, and actually slid into place, thus minimizing line downtime. USNR is also upgrading a particleboard press at Roseburg Forest Products in Dillard.
Westmill Industries is rebuilding a dryer at Boise’s softwood plywood plant in Louisiana, converting it from steam to gas. The company continues to promote its LightSort green veneer moisture content measurement technology, which is based on light transmission, enhancing green veneer stacking. The company also touted its feed forward dryer control.
Ventek promoted its multi-point diverter system, which sorts trash at the clipper and put it in the trays. Con-vey displayed a four axis Kawasaki robot as part of its material handling technologies. The company reported numerous inquires for potential projects in 2013 and 2014.
Hyster displayed its new Tier 4 28,000 lb. truck, the H280HD.
Chris McMullen of exhibitor Precision Energy Services thought the show provided a good forum for potential customers to see what the company has to offer. The engineering, procurement and construction company specializes in biomass and can contribute engineering and design services or oversee a complete project if needed.
“We’ve been working on a lot of smaller systems for projects in Montana, Vermont and Canada,” McMullen said, adding that the company also worked on a project near the TP&EE Portland show site, in Warrenton, Ore., that included disassembling and moving a boiler from Montana to Hampton Lumber’s sawmill on the Oregon Coast.
Cole Martin of exhibitor Dieffenbacher North America emphasized the company’s growing reach into the wood bioenergy sector, including the introduction of a new pelletizer that provides significantly greater capacity from one machine than conventional systems. Dieffenbacher also offers heat energy and drying technologies and Martin says Dieffenbacher has become a full line supplier of machinery to the wood pellet market. Dieffenbacher is a long-time manufacturer of machinery for wood-based panels production.
VISITORS
All the way from Monroeville, Ala., J.P. Brooks with Harrigan Lumber said he was looking for ideas for the future with upgrades planned for bandmills and filing room equipment. “We’ve seen a lot of good equipment and technology that’s different and new,” Brooks said.
Steve Fullmer, head filer at Sun Mountain Lumber in Deer Lodge, Mont., attended the workshop session on machine alignment and was touring the show floor looking for ideas and new technology. “There’s always something that someone has that you can implement in your process to make improvements,” he said, adding that TP&EE was also turning out to be “a fun place to come where you can see old friends.”
From eastern Oregon, Scott Ezell of Collins Co.’s Boardman hardwood mill, noted, “We’re always looking for new ideas and plans, and we have some projects that we’re looking at in the near future, so we’re here looking for new ideas and opportunities.”
According to attendee Harold Berkholtz, a quality control manager with major Canadian pellet producer Pinnacle Renewable Energy Group, “We’ve seen some very interesting new equipment in bulk storage, plus new chipping concepts and screening. We’re looking for new and revolutionary equipment for the pellet industry.”
Berkholtz made the trip to TP&EE from British Columbia, where Pinnacle operates six pellet plants with more than 1 million ton annual capacity. The company is working on a project to redevelop and upgrade a marine shipping terminal at Port of Prince Rupert, BC, in order to boost the company’s pellet export activities.
WORKSHOPS
During TP&EE’s workshop day, longtime biomass power and cogeneration expert and consultant Bill Carlson of Carlson Small Power Consultants delivered a presentation on the potential for cogeneration at traditional forest products manufacturing plants.
Carlson noted that in many respects there are good reasons for a mill to add cogeneration, among them the increase in renewable portfolio standards in many states, plus continued consumer interest in voluntarily purchasing green power and volatility in fossil fuel prices.
Many mills are in need of boiler upgrades that could spur cogen projects, Carlson added. Plus, many mills are looking at reduced residuals markets and transportation costs that favor dry over green products.
Utilities companies are also more favorable toward biomass, which has baseload firing characteristics similar to coal, and cogen plants fit well into existing power transmission infrastructure, Carlson said.
The best candidates for cogen projects, Carlson said, are medium- to large-size mills with older boilers that need to expand dry product volume and are facing poor residuals markets. Such an operation should also have operational control of slash volumes through land ownership or logging contracts—and ideally be working with a utility that’s looking to expand renewable power purchases through a strong local infrastructure.
Keys to a successful project include not going too large—5-20 MW plants are probably best, and much larger tends to generate local opposition. “The size of the project should increase byproduct flexibility, not eliminate it, and help build a price floor but not a ceiling,” Carlson said.
Scott Horton of USNR told how his company is developing systems that take advantage of most mill employees’ overall familiarity with computers, which provides more opportunities on the mill floor to benefit from vision and optimization. “The new generation of scanning and optimization provides better information to the guys on the mill floor, with each piece being tracked through the system,” he said.
JoeScan President Joey Nelson gave a presentation detailing some of the technologies and options available to mills when determining the best way to go on a scanning or optimization project.
Lucidyne researcher Andreas Buers promoted a balanced approach to optimization that melds both production- and sales-focused optimization strategies by employing consistent parameters across all optimizers and increased use of simulations to boost system accountability and predictability.
Microtec’s Norbert Oberaigner gave a profile of his company’s history and its efforts in developing a sophisticated multi-sensor scanning system that combines infrared, 3D and x-ray technologies. Gale Miller of Autolog gave details on the features and benefits of Autolog’s new Hi Density 3D Transverse Optimizer with split detection capability.
A presentation was also made on machinery alignment by Dave Halstead in cooperation with Brunson Instrument, while Chris Lambert of Lacey-Harmer spoke on bandmill cutting optimization.
The ever important topic of wood dust was addressed by Chris Chathams of Timber Products Manufacturers Assn. and Brad Carr of Integrated Environmental Solutions.
Representatives from Daqota Systems, Delta Computer Systems, Westmill Industries and USNR addressed veneer lathe and dryer technologies.
VIDEO BROADCASTS PLANNED FROM NEW PORTLAND SHOW

Organizers of the new Timber Processing & Energy Expo announce that a video broadcast report will be aired from the event each afternoon.
TP&EE is scheduled October 17-19, 2012, Wednesday-Friday, at the Portland Exposition Center in Portland, Oregon. Nearly 170 exhibitors have signed up to display their technologies and services to primary producers of lumber, engineered wood products, panels and wood energy.
Hatton-Brown Media, an affiliate of show producer, Hatton-Brown Expositions LLC, will assemble, produce and air 10 minute video broadcasts each afternoon at 4 p.m. Central Standard Time. The broadcasts will include video of the expo floor and interviews with exhibitor personnel and mill attendees.
EDUCATION OPPORTUNITIES ABOUND DURING TP&EE

Sawmill Scanning & Optimization is one of the featured subjects planned for the Workshop Day of the upcoming Timber Processing & Energy Expo to be held at the Portland Exposition Center in Portland, Ore. The machinery expo will be held October 17-19, 2012. Workshop Day is planned for October 18.
Several presentations will address various technologies in sawmill scanning/optimization, ranging from scanning at primary breakdown to lumber grade scanning on the back end. Other featured subjects include Machinery Alignment & Sawing Systems, Wood Dust Issues & Technologies, Veneer Lathes & Technologies and Wood Energy Developments. Fifteen presentations in all will address these subjects.
The cost to register for Workshop Day is only $75 and includes admission to any of the presentations.
Those not interested in attending the Workshop have two registration options: one is for free registration to walk the show floor, and the other is a $10 fee which includes a “beer and a bratwurst” at the Beer Garden in addition to a pass to walk the show floor.
Organizers of TP&EE also announce that prior to the machinery show, Forest Products Society–Southeast has organized a series of day long Short Courses to be held October 16 at the Red Lion Hotel, Jantzen Beach. Participants include Oregon State University, Georgia Research Institute, Wood Machining Institute and Forisk Consulting.
For more information, contact Show Manager Dianne Sullivan, 334-834-1170; dianne@hattonbrown.com