5030
Epic Contributor
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2003
- Messages
- 26,992
- Location
- SE Michigan in the middle of nowhere
- Tractor
- Kubota M9000 HDCC3 M9000 HDC
Additionally... Biomass (pellet and corn burning appliances) don't produce creosote if vented and operating properly.
All they produce is fine fly ash, no creosote what so ever and why they mist be maintained religiously and often as the fly ash will plug them up. When I'm using mine, they get cleaned internally at least weekly and I take apart the external venting and clean it inside a couple times during the heating season plus my external venting has a removable fly ash trap at the bottom of the vertical outside pipe run that gets dumped weekly and of course all of that is extremely messy.
Like I said previously, with the cost of manufactured pellets today, they are almost cost prohibitive to operate unless you can buy pellets in truckload quantities which I have in the past. truckload quantity is usually 22 skids of pellets delivered on a tractor trailer and the skids average 2000 pounds each so you need the proper equipment to unload them as well plus they have to be stored inside as if they sit outside, they attract moisture and damp pellets turn to mush in the bags which are usually 40 pounds per poly bag. Once they get soggy with moisture, they are not useable as a biomass stove needs it's fuel at or below 7% RM to combust.
All they produce is fine fly ash, no creosote what so ever and why they mist be maintained religiously and often as the fly ash will plug them up. When I'm using mine, they get cleaned internally at least weekly and I take apart the external venting and clean it inside a couple times during the heating season plus my external venting has a removable fly ash trap at the bottom of the vertical outside pipe run that gets dumped weekly and of course all of that is extremely messy.
Like I said previously, with the cost of manufactured pellets today, they are almost cost prohibitive to operate unless you can buy pellets in truckload quantities which I have in the past. truckload quantity is usually 22 skids of pellets delivered on a tractor trailer and the skids average 2000 pounds each so you need the proper equipment to unload them as well plus they have to be stored inside as if they sit outside, they attract moisture and damp pellets turn to mush in the bags which are usually 40 pounds per poly bag. Once they get soggy with moisture, they are not useable as a biomass stove needs it's fuel at or below 7% RM to combust.