goeduck
Super Member
What percent moisture* do you guys dry down to? We bottom out around 18% due to our marine climate.
*outdoor wood storage, not basement
*outdoor wood storage, not basement
That's all I have too, just a fire box with a damper, with a stainless pipe that goes out through the basement wall, then turns and goes up...I always figure that if I get half a 5 gallon bucket full or less when I clean the chimney things are good. I don't have a stove that requires bone dry wood. Just an air tight firebox with a damper control. Keep thinking it would be interesting to get a moisture meter just to see what I am burning but regardless of the reading I doubt I would do anything different. To me the 1/2 bucket rule and what the flue looks like glaze wise is more meaningful but I'm not up to date on stuff.
gg
What percent moisture* do you guys dry down to? We bottom out around 18% due to our marine climate.
*outdoor wood storage, not basement
What percent moisture* do you guys dry down to? We bottom out around 18% due to our marine climate.
*outdoor wood storage, not basement
What a kawinkidink me too...........That's all I have too, just a fire box with a damper, with a stainless pipe that goes out through the basement wall, then turns and goes up...
Back when I couldn't get far enough ahead on my firewood I burned what I had, it just wasn't dried down enough. Those days I had creosote no matter how I ran my stove, but of course, I had more when I didn't run it hard.
These days, I don't have to run it hard to be creosote free, and what I do get, looks like completely burnt up ash just like the ashes in the bottom of my stove.
What I got out of my stove pipe on Saturday, I doubt would have filled a quart jar...
SR
What a kawinkidink me too...........
So it looks like you have a forced hot air furnace in the basement looking at the stairs etc. Growing up in the Lakes Region of NH my dad had obtained an old Sam Daniels wood forced hot air wood furnace and we burned about 12 cord of wood a winter. He had piped in a oil burner forced hot air furnace as well so that in the middle of the night it could take over if necessary. The house was over 200 years old at the time and it was an 11 room house and in the oldest parts it was a little breezy to say the least.
If you look more closely you will notice that he took a regular woodstove and built a heat collector on top. It achieves the same goal as what you describe though.
That's what you get when you cross a Yankee professional welder with the need to stay warm at the lowest price possible. :thumbsup: