As my Son reminds me - many engineer's errors are because lack of the appropriate UNITS.
The lack of proper units along with mirror images are both "huge" in the error column - so he tells me.
Yes, I inadvertently called the flooring boards as 1"x4"x8'. The 1"x8"x32" was interpreted as that size, because I didn't think you would buy a 32" long board. (An excuse - When thinking of board feet, I find it strange to figure length in inches.)
Told you I was confused.
So - I now understand (I think) the wood from mccabinetmaker was approximately 128 cu.in. Added to this was the 256 cu.in. of wood you bought locally. And the total of these pieces, expressed in Cubic inches is; 128 in.³+ 256 in.³= 384 cu.in. If this number were to be converted to board feet using a factor of 144 in³/ board foot, you would have started with 2.67 board feet.
By these figures (assuming my arithmetic is correct) They agree with your analysis. You started with a little over 2 1/2 board feet and had 1 board foot of scrap, not counting sawdust.
Man! That's a pretty good record for your first project and a really complicated one at that! Once again, Mike - Good Job!
Now I must put in a disclaimer in case some of my forester friends are reading this:
Granted, conversion from cubic inches to board feet is a very rough conversion, as board feet are not measured in exact inches. The two measures (Cubic and Board Feet) are really entirely different measures. To jump between the two measures is somewhat analogous to comparing troy weight to avoirdupois weight. (the reason a pound of feathers weigh more than a pound of gold) Conversions,
or the lack of, between cubic and board foot measures have been the subject of endless discussions and disagreement between researchers and wood product people for a long-long time!
Octogenarian's have an earned right to be a curmudgeon.
Chuck in Lancaster, CA