Not without seriously reducing the strength.
Making cuts that don't go all the way thru will make it more flexible and easier to straighten out if your nailing it down, but this weakens the board.
Don't know that this is possible. Best to store it flat or perfectly upright in controlled heat and humidity so that it doesn't warp in the first place.
This classification covers establishments primarily engaged in producing commercial hardwood veneer and those primarily engaged in manufacturing commercial plywood or prefinished hardwood plywood
Hard maple plywood
pine,cedar,plywood,maple,and ?
Nope....sorry
you can heat it in the microwave or oven, if your doing it in the oven go on very low heat, and once it is heated, bend it to the shape you want.
No, unless you plan to sand the floor. Prefinished floors are already polyurethaned.
The most common materials are Canadian Maple Veneer, Baltic Birch Plywood and Bamboo
Melamine is a synthetic material frequently used to cover rough edges of cheap particle board or plywood. In this case maple melamine means it is melamine that has been decorated to try to look like wood.
sealer
Today, the prefinished hardwood floors are excellent and you will not notice a difference if you buy high quality flooring. Another benefit about not staining the floors yourself is that you will not have to breathe unnecessary toxic chemicals.
Most of the cabinets are plywood. Try to use a U.S. product. Birch is good for paint, oak or maple is better for a stained finish.
Plywood may be made from hardwoods, softwoods, or a combination of the two. Some common hardwoods include ash, maple, mahogany, oak, and teak. The most common softwood used to make plywood in the United States is Douglas fir, although several varieties of pine, cedar, spruce, and redwood are also used.