Firewood

  • Thread starter Thread starter Ed L
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I think a lot of cultural knowledge about woodburning has been lost. Around here, most houses don't have a fireplace anymore. You used to get one whether you wanted it or not :^D With every house having woodburning capability, knowledge of wood, even if imperfect tended to propagate.
And that is why threads like this exist. To pass on the knowledge of others to people looking for information rooted in old timey ways learned from those before us.
 
I have burned open flame alcohol in the house for some quick heat. I need to make a nicer looking coffee table fire pit, but it sure puts out a lot of heat when the "smoke"(CO2 & H2O) is kept in the house.

I just found this, the haiku bot comment is funny
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I'd prefer a design that better mixes the fuel and air to minimize carbon monoxide production, but that might decrease the visual quality of the flame.
 
I shouldn’t muddle things up since my world is so different from most of yours.

I very very rarely stack. Takes too much time. I try to take steps to save steps. Still working on that. When I deliver I almost always just throw the pieces on a stakebed and calc 1.5 times the space required for stacked. I can throw a cord off the trailer in 15 minutes that way. Maybe half hour to load? I shudder to think how long to throw it in and periodically climb in and stack it.


Sometimes I do stack into totes. Handy to forklift load for delivery, but they are small so if only throwing the wood in, can’t get the volume in one load on the flatbed truck. It’s also not fun to bend over into the totes and throw the wood out unloading. Need to build a dump…

I don’t need a cover in the desert. Generally the wood is already dead and dry. If green, I try to cut it green (much easier and more pleasant than hard and dry). Then I let it dry in round form until it splits easier.

I’ve been thinking about how to split directly on the trailer. Hold the log over the trailer, cut the rounds to fall on it, split them on it, drive away (sales/delivery).

I need to build the forklift fork mounted splitter. Pinch, lift over trailer, split into pieces into trailer.
 
Incidentally…I split a few rounds from a log of hard, dense, interlocked grain, dry Euc today. The tough stuff. I did it with my 6lb Oz block splitter (hi @Bermy !). Towards the end I switched to the 8lb Estwing for one round…I think the Oz splitter was actually better.
 
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