How do you get airflow to the interior of that column?
That would be like a Holzhauzen, but not packed as tight. But yeah, nothing beats a single-row stack in the wind for drying. The bin would probably dry as fast as my 3-row stacks on pallets..maybe faster.
I'm going to try this with pallets for the bottoms so I can move them with the tractor.
In that case, I might cut flat panels out of the Lowe's stuff and build cubes with four sides on a pallet, using some of those heavy duty fence staples to nail the bottoms of the panels to the sides of the pallet. Should be easily moveable, or use a couple criss-crossed ratchet straps as additional insurance when you move them.
the whole thing probably weighs 8-10.000 lbs when filled with oak.
For the size with 8*20' remesh, the volume is about 6.8 m3 or 240 cu ft.
The rule of thumb I've seen mentioned is that in a pickup bed (for a volume example,) you can stack a half cord, but thrown in it's about 1/3 cord. So instead of 2 cords, you'll have closer to 4/3 cord. The heaviest dry cords are a bit over 4000, so you might have a little over 5000 lbs. in one of your bins. Plus you overlap the end of the remesh..
I use lighter welded wire fencing to do the same thing, because it is what I had laying around. It's mainly for shorts and uglies. I currently have three in service, and it works fine. The heavier remesh would be better, but not necessary, just don't throw heavy splits into the side, I just drop them in.
One is on a skid, the other two are on the ground, with a few layers of rough bark to keep the wood off the ground.
Yeah, if you aren't moving 'em, you can get away with a lightweight version. I haven't made a bin lately but my last one, for chunks and uglies, was two pallets, then I drove six t-posts to fasten the woven wire to.
What I've been doing lately instead of a separate bin is, when bucking a log, I'll cut the gnarly chunks to like 8" long. Then I split them down into wedge chunks so that two of them side by side will be the same length as a 16" split. Then I can just stack 'em with my other wood, mixing a couple in here and there.
That is odd, I read recently that the reason they make PVC fence only in white, is because darker colors get too hot in the sun and ruin the fence.
The black ones look much better, too.
They usually say on the bag of black or green cable ties, that they are UV-resistant.