Heating with coal

/ Heating with coal #1  

dj1701

Veteran Member
Joined
Nov 30, 2002
Messages
1,235
Location
East Concord, NY
Tractor
John Deere 4320, Kubota BX2680
I have been heating with coal for a couple of years now. I buy my coal in bulk cause it is cheaper. I was wondering if anyone has any good ideas for a container for the coal. I am looking at maybe 6 tons.

Thanks
Dave
 
/ Heating with coal #2  
Interesting, I know nothing about using coal.

Do you burn it like firewood ?, How much 'space' is 6 tons of coal ?
 
/ Heating with coal #3  
build yourself something like a grain bin?
how is it delivered? loose or in 100 pound bags?
 
/ Heating with coal #5  
We had coalstoves when I was growing up. I could still do it if I had to. It would be good to have a bin, keeps it dry. Wet and snowy coal pops and cracks big time.

I remember putting coal in the front to keep the fire all night, learning how to adjust the damper just so, so it burned right, and opening the draft at the bottom of the stove to give it more air and get it going good, shaking the ashes down, taking them out, getting it going in the morning, etc, ours didn't go out at night unless we were gone overnight or the folks didn't get enough in it, it rarely did. Also sometimes getting coal with sulphur in it, yuck, or coal that just didn't burn right. But it sure put out the heat. We had a stove with a metal frame around it, looked kind of like a gas stove, looked nice, had little doors on the side. There was a place in the back for a fan but we didn't have one. I can remember curling up in the place behind the stove with a blanket and reading or doing homework there, was the warmest place in the house.
 
/ Heating with coal #6  
why dont you try to find a used roll off dumpster and get a canvas tarp or something made for the top (with bows out of conduit or something)

I assume bulk means loose coal delivered on some sort of conveyor truck?

or a shipping container that you build bulkheads in with 2x material. you could always leave a 6" gap at the bottom of each bulkhead.
 
/ Heating with coal #7  
Our coal furnace was in the basement, Mom & Dad would get around 7 tons for the winter. Had a little hatch in the front porch and a coal bin in the corner next to the furnace.

It had two wooden posts about two feet apart w/ guides for boards to slide in and dad would put them all in b/4 the coal truck came each fall. Area was around 5' X 10' and was built up around 6 feet tall. By spring all the boards would be pulled put and you had to walk in to get the remaining coal.

My alarm clock growing up was the sound of dad shaking the grates and the distinct two sounds of the shovel sliding intothe coal VRS the sound of it getting the ashes from the bottom.

Puberty also meant carring the 5 gal pails of ashes up the steps and out to the curb till I was big and strong enough to carry two in each hand, just like dad...
 
/ Heating with coal #8  
We burn 7 ton of rice coal every year and store it in a coal bin in the cellar. Biggest problem with storing coal inside is the dust that it creates, coal burns hot but is it ever dirty.
 
/ Heating with coal #9  
It is not available here but for the information and amazement of readers, how much does this 6-7 tons cost you folks for the year's heat?
 
/ Heating with coal #10  
A guy at work uses the 4x4x4 plastic fabric bags the coal guy has hooks on the back of his truck to hold bag and dumps in to the bag.

When bag is full he stops flow ties up bag top and lowers it to ground pulls forward and load another bag. they can be moved by loops on top by fork lift he works out of the bottom hopper a couple of buckets at a time.

tom
 
/ Heating with coal #11  
I sometimes burn coal that I find in my yard, burns well. :)
 
/ Heating with coal #12  
I can hear my mother just like it was yesterday " I don't want you boys playing in the coal bin!"
 
/ Heating with coal #13  
[It is not available here but for the information and amazement of readers, how much does this 6-7 tons cost you folks for the year's heat?]

I live in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania and use 3 ton of rice coal for the winter. This is supplemented by my hot water radiators from gas furnace at 58ー day 52ー night. The hot air coal stoker stove is set at 72ー all the time.

I pay $179 a ton delivered.
 
/ Heating with coal #14  
live in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania and use 3 ton of rice coal for the winter.

When my father spent numerous stints overseas, grew up as a child in Saint Clair. Both gradfathers died in the coal mines (guess it didn't make the newspapers back then), and I still remember the coal truck stoping at the house to "drop off" coal straight from the truck to the basement through the basement window into the "coal room" across from the coal furnace.

Do kids still get coal in their stocking if they're "bad" for Christmas?:D

Hate to say this, but coal is going the same route as oil for heating (in another 100 years).

This is supplemented by my hot water radiators from gas furnace at 58ï½° day 52ï½° night.

Gas furnace or gas boiler?
 

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