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larry g
 
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Well Chris your a bit incorrect is saying its not done in the US. My great
Aunt had a sawdust furnace in her house in Albany OR. The chip truck would
back up to the house and dump it down a chute into the basement and it was
augured into the furnace. Now Albany used to be a timber town and lots of
wood waste was produced. I don't know of any sawdust furnaces today.
lg
no neat sig line

"Chris" wrote in message
...

"William Wixon" wrote in message
...
i've always wondered about this too.
why is it not possible to use a wood chipper to chip up trees/branches,
put them in a wire hopper (like the way they used to do corn, a corn
crib) and maybe even possibly have an auger feed mechanism into a
furnace. i'm saying, so you don't have to buy pellets from corporation.
it seems it would facilitate much faster drying, be easier to store,
transport, etc. chipper technology is fully developed, chips would
obviate the need for a expensive pelletizer machine. no splitting,
stacking firewood. less dirty, no bugs, etc.

why don't people do this?!

b.w.

People do this. Jut not in the US.

I use to live in Europe (read high gas prices and low availability of
wood). Everything is burned. Chipping branches and other waste is almost
a given in Europe. Travel to Europe and take a gander through the woods,
and wonder why they are so clean of fallen branches, etc.

In Germany feeding furnaces with an auger of chipped wood is very common.
Whole factories and even municipalities use such as a fuel. Although the
chipped wood is not limited to branches and such, but whole trees.
Reasoning being the exact reasons you stated above, ease of
transportation, storage, etc. Plus it is a lot easier to send a whole
tree through a chipper than splitting it.

It is odd that Europe, given its limited resources of wood, are many times
more advanced at burning it than we are here in the US.

Chris