Anybody got any good pics or helpful advice for making boxes to hold firewood from scrap pallets? I'm tired of stacking…I had a stack of about 8 cords of wood (all for one customer) seasoning and about 2/3 of it fell over after a really heavy rain last weekend. Now I'm looking at it thinking there's no way I'm touching it anymore than I have to at this point.
My idea/goal is to build boxes that could, if need be, be picked up with pallet forks on a larger farm tractor and put on the back of a flatbed. Ideally would hold 1/2 cord of 16" splits tossed in. No stacking. I've done a bit of rough math and experimenting and it seems that 1/2 cord stacked is 64 cu ft, then 1/2 cord loosely tossed is about 85-90 cu ft.
That would be 2 48"x40" pallets held together somehow as the floor base, with 3 sides (either 40" or 48" tall depending on which side) That should hold 1/2 cord tossed, right? I just wonder how much bracing would be needed to hold together the bottom 2 pallets as the base if it were to be picked up on forks (full of wood) and loaded on a truck...
I'm going to build one like that as a trial run and brace it adequately with scrap lumber/2x4s/whatever I have on hand and see how it goes. I have basically unlimited access to free pallets as they come in each week.
I don't have access to a tractor w/ forks where the wood is currently, but it would be great to be able to use these boxes in the future should that option come up for ease of transport. I bring in about 1/2 cord of fresh split wood each week, sometimes more and, I will be delivering a 1/2 cord of cook wood once a week, every week for the foreseeable future. Really trying to really make this more efficient and cut down on handling wherever possible.
Also, how does green/freshly split wood season tossed into a pallet box (uncovered on top) compared to stacking. Will be in a high sun and wind location regardless and I split small, like avg no larger than 4" usually, but many times smaller.
Pic below - something akin to this but built with pallets that have less slats/more opening for better air flow. Maybe about this size or slightly larger footprint.
My idea/goal is to build boxes that could, if need be, be picked up with pallet forks on a larger farm tractor and put on the back of a flatbed. Ideally would hold 1/2 cord of 16" splits tossed in. No stacking. I've done a bit of rough math and experimenting and it seems that 1/2 cord stacked is 64 cu ft, then 1/2 cord loosely tossed is about 85-90 cu ft.
That would be 2 48"x40" pallets held together somehow as the floor base, with 3 sides (either 40" or 48" tall depending on which side) That should hold 1/2 cord tossed, right? I just wonder how much bracing would be needed to hold together the bottom 2 pallets as the base if it were to be picked up on forks (full of wood) and loaded on a truck...
I'm going to build one like that as a trial run and brace it adequately with scrap lumber/2x4s/whatever I have on hand and see how it goes. I have basically unlimited access to free pallets as they come in each week.
I don't have access to a tractor w/ forks where the wood is currently, but it would be great to be able to use these boxes in the future should that option come up for ease of transport. I bring in about 1/2 cord of fresh split wood each week, sometimes more and, I will be delivering a 1/2 cord of cook wood once a week, every week for the foreseeable future. Really trying to really make this more efficient and cut down on handling wherever possible.
Also, how does green/freshly split wood season tossed into a pallet box (uncovered on top) compared to stacking. Will be in a high sun and wind location regardless and I split small, like avg no larger than 4" usually, but many times smaller.
Pic below - something akin to this but built with pallets that have less slats/more opening for better air flow. Maybe about this size or slightly larger footprint.