Had people tell about wood being to dry . Burning wood is comparable to burning gas in a engine . Dump a little water or sap in your fuel tank . For me about like saying the gas was to dry brunt to fast .
The ash bore is here with its green beetle looking bug. I’m probably looking at cutting my very old large ash trees down soon.
My firewood was over a year seasoned when I would sell it. Some wood burners up north burn wood after it’s been cut four months.
The dead punk oak wood is the best burning its pinkish on the inside. When they cut for a new highway here I went after the punk oak. Others went after the green wood.
Cody, I've never seen the actual borer here but in the last years we have the evidence everywhere. Dead branches in the tops, suckers growing from the bottom and bark falling off when hit with tractor tire or whatever. When bark falls off they are covered with borer tracks on the wood. Also the trees are being attached aggressively by wood peckers. The last year has been really bad, I'm afraid I'm not going to be able to keep up on the property that I cut on. We have ash trees falling down all over in the approx. 40 acre bush. I only have so much time available to cut.
Cody, part of my plan was buying my sawmill so that I could stock pile ash logs for milling later and using up the crap for firewood. Only problem is the time thing, just not enough of it.
This is a google picture. View attachment 664825
I bought a Woodland Mills HM130, nice machine and should work fine for what I want to do. I built a trailer for it so I could move it around if wanted.
It's a proven fact that seasoned firewood creates more heat than unseasoned firewood.. What issues are you talking about "that can not be proved" Your confused, or I'm confused about the point your trying to make.If you read about some of the debates that go on and on here you will realize it does not matter. Green wood does burn slower than dry seasoned wood so what. If you have a large supply of wood who cares what it takes to stay warm. If you have some limits then how you manage your supply does matter. It takes a certain amount of BTU's to dry out wood that is either wet or unseasoned and again it does not matter. Take it from an old ***t do not waste time discussing issues that can not be proved. If you had a university visit most people will not listen. Thanks
It's a proven fact that seasoned firewood creates more heat than unseasoned firewood.. What issues are you talking about "that can not be proved" Your confused, or I'm confused about the point your trying to make.
Just the facts:
1. The number of BTUs to heat a house varies greatly depending on the size the insulation and the outside temperature.
2. The number of BTUs that can be extracted from firewood varies greatly as well. The species of wood and the moisture content are the greatest factors. Other factors include the design of the wood-burning appliance and how many BTUs go up the chimney as opposed to staying in the house. This is where OWBs really suffer as the fire is not in the house thus heat is lost outside and in the plumbing to get it into the house. (I also understand the advantages of a OWB and am not bashing them, only pointing out if you want efficiency the OWB is not the way to go.)
3. The math and science both support your point of seasoned wood being better than green wood. However the only way to truly put it to the test is to build two houses side by side with the same exact OWB using the same plumbing and design. Both houses must have the exact same temperature and other appliances and see the exact same use. Give one house the exact same type of wood and the exact same amount but one green wood and the other 2 year old wood. Then sit back and watch who loads the boiler more often and who runs out of wood first.
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