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Had our stove about 2 years now and hoping to install at least one more.
Previously I've paid £75/load for ready split logs that have been about 14" long that stack and fit in the stove nicely.
I've now got a decent supply of fresh wood that's costing £40/big pickup load and I'm happy to split and store it. Only thing is that the rings are shorter at about 9-10" or sometimes less. Although they're easy to split with an axe they'll be a pain to stack nicely and I'm wondering whether the shorter length will make them burn too quickly in the stove.
So should I ask my supply to try and cut them longer and make the splitting job harder or stick as we are?
Its all about girth, not length... 😯
Surely a bit of wood x 2 bigger than another bit will burn 2 x as long?
Oh and to make it burn for longer (if your stove can) but a bed of coal in. You get through much less wood and get more heat.
Leave the door open and feed in a whole tree, saves on all that chopping and cutting.
FD, you're probably right but just thought I'd check! Already using a bit of smokeless coal (6 or 7 lumps max) and yes, it makes a huge difference - and smokeless is much better than 'normal' coal.
[i]feed in a whole tree[/i]
🙂
Excellently evocative...