No. The heat release is based on equal weights of biomass.
The woods are dried @ 102C for constant weight and cooled in a dessicator loaded with phosphorus pentoxide drying agent.
Fun job every day.
The superiority of conifer woods comes from the volatile resins in the resin ducts in the wood. Not an anatomical feature of any hardwood.
It is a fact that you can smash pellets together from just about any ultra-dry junk biomass.
Salvage conifer woods, mown and harvested grasses, crushed corn cobs and leaf-stalks.
Look at the industry. Name one that uses hardwoods. The heat values have long since been measured.
I expect to burn about 10,000 lbs of conifer pellets this winter. Hoping for $235/ton again this winter.
Each ton arrives as a 4' x 4' x 4' pile on a pallet, delivered to the street edge in front of my house.
That gets moved into my downstairs kitchen where the pellet stove lives.
Come over! Any idea what 2,000 lbs of conifer wood resin smell comes off that stack?
The down side will be the loads delivered in January and February.
They sit in an unheated warehouse, might be -20C in there.
So in 30-45 minutes, I have a 2,000lb ice cube at -20C, thawing in my basement kitchen!
Performace drops off as the ash load builds up so shut down (1 hour) and clean-out (30 minutes)
has to be done every 12-15 bags ( 480 - 600lbs) for maybe 3-4 pounds of fine, flour-like brown particle ash.
Total combustion, like a blacksmith's forge.
The woods are dried @ 102C for constant weight and cooled in a dessicator loaded with phosphorus pentoxide drying agent.
Fun job every day.
The superiority of conifer woods comes from the volatile resins in the resin ducts in the wood. Not an anatomical feature of any hardwood.
It is a fact that you can smash pellets together from just about any ultra-dry junk biomass.
Salvage conifer woods, mown and harvested grasses, crushed corn cobs and leaf-stalks.
Look at the industry. Name one that uses hardwoods. The heat values have long since been measured.
I expect to burn about 10,000 lbs of conifer pellets this winter. Hoping for $235/ton again this winter.
Each ton arrives as a 4' x 4' x 4' pile on a pallet, delivered to the street edge in front of my house.
That gets moved into my downstairs kitchen where the pellet stove lives.
Come over! Any idea what 2,000 lbs of conifer wood resin smell comes off that stack?
The down side will be the loads delivered in January and February.
They sit in an unheated warehouse, might be -20C in there.
So in 30-45 minutes, I have a 2,000lb ice cube at -20C, thawing in my basement kitchen!
Performace drops off as the ash load builds up so shut down (1 hour) and clean-out (30 minutes)
has to be done every 12-15 bags ( 480 - 600lbs) for maybe 3-4 pounds of fine, flour-like brown particle ash.
Total combustion, like a blacksmith's forge.