I'm not sure what you mean by that. I deal with an independent merchant a few miles down the road from time to time. He holds a fair bit of construction section on site as well as a selection of sheet materials and treated stuff. His price list is on the wall in the office, but he generally discounts my orders as he knows I'm trade, but if a DIYer walks in with a trade-size order (i.e. £100 plus) he'll generally give them a bit of discount as well. Being a small yard he can cut to size, although he no longer does dimension planing. He has a panel saw and will sell smaller pieces of sheet stock cut to size, providing you supply him with a cut list in advance. He offers a delivery service, including on Saturday mornings, for a nominal fee, but order above about £500 and he'll generally deliver for free. His prices are above the larger merchants (he knows it), but below the local builders merchants and well below the DIY sheds whilst his quality is consistently good, all of which makes it worth buying from him.The troulbe with all the yards though (as a dIYer) is that it's rarley ever priced in the yard.
The troulbe with all the yards though (as a dIYer) is that it's rarley ever priced in the yard.
That varies from yard to yard, and always has in my experience. If they cut it'll often be a case of the first cut or two are free, after that you pay 50p to £1 a cut (bear in mind that they need to have a machine, which takes up space, and that the saw man is supposed to be trained, so the service is costing them). It's always worth asking if they'll supply materials to a cut list. Outfits like Travis often won't cut (at least my most local one won't), so they'd just have to put up with me whipping my cordless saw out and doing a few cuts in the yard to get it inside the van LOLDo timber merchants cut wood for free? Also, how tolerant would they be at dealing with DIY-cutting in their car park or exterior premise?
That varies from yard to yard, and always has in my experience. If they cut it'll often be a case of the first cut or two are free, after that you pay 50p to £1 a cut (bear in mind that they need to have a machine, which takes up space, and that the saw man is supposed to be trained, so the service is costing them). It's always worth asking if they'll supply materials to a cut list. Outfits like Travis often won't cut (at least my most local one won't), so they'd just have to put up with me whipping my cordless saw out and doing a few cuts in the yard to get it inside the van LOL
It's worth noting that even a yard which offers a cutting service may not be able to cut for you if you just turn up - their staff may be otherwise occupied unloading a delivery or loading up their own truck for deliveries to customers (especially on a Saturday morning), so if you require cutting it's always best to ask them a day or maybe two before you need to take delivery. One place I use has both a beam saw and a CNC router and will CNC machine sheet material to order - if you supply a CAD drawing they are happier with that and it costs less to get the cutting done because they don't need to set-up the drawing in CAD. Another thing tio note is that most decent yards don't like DIYers (or tradesmen for that matter) picking through their stock to get at the "best stuff" then leaving an unholy mess for them to tidy up, but equally they probably won't supply you with banana pine of licorice twist cedar, either (or will replace it if they do in error - BTW a bowed piece can be acceptable if the bow isn't too bad and you are doing lots of short pieces)
There are quite a few places these days which bar you from selecting your own stuff on the grounds of "health and safety", but I suspect it's more to stop the guys who will pull every piece out of the rack looking for the one perfect piece (then not replace any of the stuff they've hauled out). TBH this sort of behaviour afflicts yards selling hardwoods more than those selling softwoods. It is accepted in the trade that your timber will be picked off the stack "as it falls", which may mean accepting a couple of pieces out of, say 20 or so, which have defects. Normally this isn't a problem because (i) anyone in the trade expects a certain percentage of wastage which is factored into a job and (ii) even if there are defects in one or two pieces these can normally be used out of sight/as noggins/recut for smaller components/cut round, etc, but no tradesman wants to go into a yard and discover that the stack of, say, 1in oak boards has already been picked over multiple times and only poor quality boards remain - it's a total waste of time dealing with yards which allow this. So basically if you are given the option of selecting your own boards, don't hog all the best boards when you don't need themWhen you say they don't like this or that kind of people, what do they do, give people a funny look?