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Wood Burning
Basics
1. Burn only dry, seasoned
firewood
Freshly cut wood contains
up to 80% moisture, and must be "seasoned" (dried to
20-25% moisture content) before burning. Wood containing more
than 25% moisture is "wet" or "green", and
should never be burned in a fireplace or woodstove.
If exposed to rain, a fallen tree will wet-rot before it ever
dries enough to be used for fuel. To properly season firewood,
cut it into stove-sized pieces and stack it so air can circulate
and carry away the moisture as it evaporates through both ends
of each piece.
The woodpile must be sheltered to prevent rainwater from being
re-absorbed, which reverses the drying process: firewood that
is exposed to rain will rapidly become just as wet as it was
when freshly cut.
Wood must be cut into pieces and stacked out of the rain for
at least 6-9 months to season properly.
If no seasoned wood can be found, high-density compressed sawdust
logs make an excellent substitute. Avoid burning mill ends in
woodstoves, as the exhaust from even "untreated" mill
ends has shown itself to be tremendously corrosive to metal.
2. Burn the wood gases
Most of the moisture content
remaining in seasoned firewood consists of wood resins. As wood
heats up in the fire chamber, these resins emit combustible gases
which, when ignited in the secondary burn chamber, can account
for as much as half the heat output of the fire.
When green or wet firewood is burned, the extra water content
turns to steam and mixes with the wood gases, preventing them
from igniting and releasing their heat value.
When the draft control is set too low and the fire smolders,
the wood gases won't ignite in the resulting oxygen-starved environment,
even if the firewood is properly seasoned.
When the wood gases aren't burned in the secondary burn chamber,
they escape up the chimney, taking their heat value with them
and creating heavy creosote formation.
3. Don't let creosote build
up in the chimney
Creosote is a highly combustible
substance which condenses in liquid form as wood exhaust cools
in the chimney, and then solidifies as it dries. If ignited,
creosote can burn for days at temperatures exceeding 2,000 degrees,
which is hot enough to destroy the chimney and ignite surrounding
combustibles.
Creosote is very caustic; if allowed to accumulate, it will significantly
shorten the lifetime of the stovepipe and chimney.
A seasoned-wood fire that is given enough oxygen for proper combustion
will reduce creosote formation in two ways, by consuming more
of the wood gases while at the same time sending more heat up
the chimney to reduce flue gas cooling.
4. Practice Proper Chimney
Maintenance
Creosote should be removed
from the chimney before buildup in the flue exceeds 1/4"
thickness. Chimneys which vent properly operated woodstoves generally
require cleaning ONCE EACH YEAR.
If green or wet wood is
burned, or if the fire is allowed to smolder, the chimney will
require cleaning much more often, and should be inspected frequently.
Creosote sticks like glue, and must be removed with a tight-fitting
propaleen brush. Rattling tire chains down the chimney or pulling
a bag of straw through the flue won't remove creosote, and neither
will a chimney fire.
Chimney fires burn away
the resinous portion of the creosote, but the sooty husk remains:
if this husk isn't removed after a chimney fire, smoke will filter
through it, rapidly re-depositing fresh liquid resin. In a very
short time, the chimney will be as bad as it was before the fire.
5. Follow these woodburning
tips
If steam bubbles and hisses
out of the end grain as the firewood heats up on the fire, the
wood is wet or green, and needs to be seasoned longer before
burning.
If a wood supplier advertises
his wood as "seasoned", or claims that it has been
"down" for a year or two or ten, be skeptical. Ask
if the wood has been cut into pieces and stacked out of the rain
for at least 9 months. If it hasn't, it isn't ready to burn.
Shelter the woodpile from
the rain, but don't cover it completely with plastic tarps or
store it in an enclosed shed or garage; air circulation is necessary
to ensure proper seasoning.
Never burn garbage, mill
ends, or individually wrapped compressed sawdust logs in a woodstove.
These contain chemicals which, when burned, are highly corrosive
to metal.
Unless the stove is approved,
never try to make a load of fuel burn longer than 6-8 hours.
Approved appliances have built-in safeguards to prevent smoldering,
but many older airtights can be adjusted to smolder along for
extended periods, resulting in heavy creosote deposits.
Operate woodstoves with
their draft control wide open for 20-30 minutes each time firewood
is added, or until the fresh load is totally engulfed in flames.
This will send heat up the flue to help solidify the liquid creosote
deposited by the previous load, while kindling the wood to start
gasification of the resins for efficient burning.
NEVER try to clean a chimney
by deliberately starting a chimney fire. Have the chimney professionally
inspected and cleaned if needed at least once per year.
If a chimney fire occurs,
close the draft control on the stove completely to quench the
supply of oxygen, and call the fire department immediately. After
the fire, make sure the chimney is thoroughly cleaned as soon
as possible.
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