Floors4Ever
ProduktaiĮžvalgosĮrankiaiPavyzdžiaiApie musKontaktaiB2BUžklausti kainos

Kalba

Žodynėlis

Grindų verslas — terminas po termino

Importo terminai, atitikties santrumpos ir produktų žodynas — trumpi, praktiški apibrėžimai užimtiems profesionalams.

Apibrėžimai šiuo metu pateikiami anglų kalba.

CIF (Cost, Insurance & Freight)
Incoterm: the seller pays cost, insurance and freight to the destination port; risk passes to the buyer on loading. The usual basis of Asian flooring quotes — and the value EU anti-dumping duty is charged on.
FOB (Free on Board)
Incoterm: the seller delivers the goods on board the vessel; the buyer arranges and pays freight, insurance and everything after.
DDP (Delivered Duty Paid)
Incoterm: the seller delivers to the named place with all duties and clearance paid — maximum certainty for the buyer, priced in.
EXW (Ex Works)
Incoterm: the buyer collects at the seller's premises and carries every cost and risk from there. Cheap on paper, demanding in practice.
Anti-dumping duty
An EU import duty offsetting unfairly low export prices. Chinese multilayered wood flooring carries definitive duties of 21.3–36.1% since 15 July 2025 (Reg. (EU) 2025/1342).
Absorption investigation
An EU probe into whether exporters have 'absorbed' a duty by cutting prices so the measure never reaches the market. One covering Chinese wood flooring opened in April 2026 and could raise duties to a maximum of 72.2%.
CN code
The EU's Combined Nomenclature customs classification. Multilayered wood flooring is CN 4418 75 00 — the code determines which duties apply.
Landed cost
The true per-m² cost of goods at your warehouse: product price plus freight, duty, clearance and inbound handling — the only number worth comparing.
EUDR
EU Deforestation Regulation (Reg. (EU) 2023/1115): requires due diligence with geolocation of harvest plots for wood products. Applies to medium and large operators from 30 December 2026, micro and small from 30 June 2027.
EUTR
EU Timber Regulation — the current legality-based due-diligence regime. Repealed by EUDR from 30 December 2026, with transitional application for products already placed on the market.
FSC
Forest Stewardship Council — certification that wood originates from responsibly managed forests, tracked through a chain-of-custody certificate.
PEFC
Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification — the other major forest-certification scheme, built on national standards.
Chain of custody (CoC)
Certified tracking of wood from forest to finished product; without CoC, a forest certificate does not transfer to the floor you buy.
CE marking
The manufacturer's declaration that a construction product meets the applicable EU harmonised standard, backed by a declaration of performance.
DoP (Declaration of Performance)
The document behind CE marking: declared performance values (fire, slip, formaldehyde, etc.) for a construction product.
E1
Formaldehyde emission class for wood-based products — the baseline requirement in the EU; stricter classes and low-emission finishes go further.
Engineered (multilayer) flooring
A real-wood wear layer bonded to a stabilising core. Far more dimensionally stable than solid wood — the standard choice for modern buildings and underfloor heating.
Solid wood flooring
Boards milled from a single piece of timber. Beautiful, refinishable — and movement-prone; generally not recommended over underfloor heating.
Wear layer
The top layer of real wood on an engineered board. Its thickness determines how many times the floor can be re-sanded over its life.
Grades (Select / Natur / Rustic)
Sorting classes for wood character: Select is calm and scarce, Natur balanced, Rustic full of knots and colour play. Same wood, different yield — hence the price gap.
Herringbone
Pattern of rectangular blocks laid at 90° to each other in a zigzag. A classic feature format enjoying a strong revival.
Chevron
Pattern of boards cut at an angle and meeting in a continuous point. More cutting waste than herringbone — and a more architectural line.
Wire-brushing
Surface treatment that brushes out the soft grain, leaving a tactile texture that hides wear and reads as natural.
Acclimatization
Letting sealed packs adjust to site climate (at least 48 hours) before installation, so boards don't move after laying.
Expansion gap
The 10–15 mm perimeter gap that gives a wood floor room to move with seasonal humidity — covered by skirting, never filled.
Wastage
The cutting allowance added to ordered quantity: roughly 5–7% for straight laying, ~10% diagonal, 10–15% for herringbone and chevron.
R-value (thermal resistance)
How much a floor build-up resists heat flow — the figure that decides underfloor-heating efficiency; check it on the product TDS.
TDS (Technical Data Sheet)
The product document with construction, tolerances, emissions, UFH suitability and installation rules. When in doubt, the TDS wins.