stever491
ArboristSite Lurker
i have been researching the conversions and just cant figure it out. i have 7 oak trees all 40' tall and 30' base, no limbs to figure in......after being spilt how many cords am i looking at
i have been researching the conversions and just cant figure it out. i have 7 oak trees all 40' tall and 30' base, no limbs to figure in......after being spilt how many cords am i looking at
30" base tapering to about a foot at the end. Would say about a cord a tree.
Sounds too high by a bunch. It takes a big tree to make a cord even including limb wood. I regularly cut Willow in the 30" and up size that go to 70 ft or more. It is a rare one that will yeild a full cord.
Harry K
Counting just the bole and no limb wood, probably close to 8 or 9 cords, double that with the limb wood.
not oak splits and stacked about 3/4 cord a tree tom trees
Hi Harry,
It will be interesting to see how much wood each tree yields. I used an online cone volume calculator http://grapevine.abe.msstate.edu/~fto/tools/vol/cone.html Then found - The standard measurement unit for wood used for paper and fuel is the cord. This is a stack of wood 4 ft. x 4 ft. x 8 ft. containing approximately 128 cubic feet of bark, wood and air space. Air space can actually be as high as 40 percent but usually averages 25 percent
So a cord( 128cu. ft.) with 25% air space would be about 96 cu. ft. of solid wood.
Using the cone volume calculator- a 30" base , 12" diameter at 40' yields 102 solid cu. ft of wood.
Using .......................................... -30" base , 4" diameter at 40' yields 75 solid cu. ft. of wood.
He never did give the diameter of the trunk at 40" - so I plugged in a couple numbers to get an idea of the volume.