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Martin Eastburn Martin Eastburn is offline
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Default Turning Fresh Stock

The Wood stove has like mine has outside air flow from a 6" pipe.
The output was an 8" single wall that was 24' tall to the A-Frame
2x tung-n-gruve ceiling then 6" closed foam and sheeting and shingles.

The fire would heat the whole house because the input vent to the
central fan/heater was at the roof area above the stove. Heat the
great room and turn on the fan for a while - dump the hot on the top.
Mix the room a bit and the whole house. Then off with the fan.

The young couple that bought it and moved in, installed air
conditioning, and a new boiler heater. dumped the good stove. I'd
love to have it in the shop!

Martin

On 9/10/2015 8:02 AM, Leon wrote:
"Mike Marlow" wrote:
Leon wrote:


Actually I have burned relatively green wood in my fire place that
leaks bubbling water from the ends and then drips to the bottom of the
fireplace. It burns slower but does burn.


Anyone who burns a wood stove will tell you that this is not true Leon. It
will smolder, but it will not burn. I've been burning wood for too many
years for anyone to tell me they can actually burn green wood. I guess it
depends on your definition of the word "burns".

Well I only burned our fireplace in our other home for 30 years. It burns
and is gone by morning. FWIW I burned in a fireplace and not a stove.
Perhaps the limited air flow of a stove hampers the burn.





You would not want to build fine furniture with wood that is cut to be
firewood. It would change shape quickly.
I repaired a coffee table several years ago that was make from walnut
that was not properly dried. It bowed and the joint broke open.


I agree with what you say and I tried to state that in my original thoughts,
but I still wonder about the whole notion of 1 year of drying time per inch
of wood.