Not all plywood is equal. Marine Plywood represents the quality apex of laminated wood panels. Originally designed for boat hull construction, it has become the material of choice for external architecture exposed to severe climates and for furniture in humidity-saturated environments.
The secret of marine plywood lies in strict production standards. Unlike packaging plywood where core layers may contain fallen knots and hidden cracks, marine grade demands zero tolerance on internal voids. A void allows moisture to penetrate, condense and trigger internal rot. Hard tropical timbers such as Okoume (light and elastic) or Sapele Mahogany are used.
It is the glue, not the wood, that fails with water. Marine Plywood uses exclusively Class 3 Phenol-Formaldehyde thermosetting resins. The acronym WBP (Water Boiled Proof) means the adhesive withstands prolonged boiling cycles (72 hours) without delamination, guaranteeing the panel will never peel even when constantly wet or salt-water immersed.
Standards
European and international references applicable.
Physical properties
Usage environment
EDGES: despite resistant glue and wood, cut panel edges remain vulnerable as they expose end-grain fibres that absorb water by capillary action. Always seal cut edges with two-component polyurethane or epoxy resin. Do NOT confuse Exterior WBP with Marine Grade BS 1088: the former may contain internal voids.