After testing a few different kinds I found hardwood softwood blend to be the best.. At least my stove likes them
Living in a small town I dont have much options. Im heading to the city where I can buy Canawick hardwood for 5.99$a bag which is about 2$ less then what I pay at home. That being said I should probably load my truck to the max weight this weekend and hope these cheaper pellets are decent.
I think the blend works well I can imagine cause it best of both worlds.. Plus it's all about the quality too
Tony - Please do let us know how the two Energex differ, and if you like both. I hope to burn them next year, from PA Pellet Guy. He was having supply issues earlier in the year so I stocked up on Presto and Hamer's. But his service and prices are good, so I plan to stock up in the summer next year on Energex, largely because they're produced in PA and thus minimize transport. Thanks!Speaking of Energex,
I will get to try the Energex Golden Premiums this winter..0,5 ash.... we'll see...
Bought 2 tons here in May on a early buy from my dealer...
will do....Tony - Please do let us know how the two Energex differ, and if you like both. I hope to burn them next year, from PA Pellet Guy. He was having supply issues earlier in the year so I stocked up on Presto and Hamer's. But his service and prices are good, so I plan to stock up in the summer next year on Energex, largely because they're produced in PA and thus minimize transport. Thanks!
Think ill try that , got a ton of FSU and a ton of LG granuels , we will go 50 50 and see also got a ton of Vermont wood pellets coming along with a ton of Maine Wood pellets , wonder how they will mix ?
Which do u consider HOTTER
I don't know, some say yes to that though. I do know that I burned 5 bags of FSU last year as a test and survived it. I didn't catch the same hype some folks seem to get from them. They were messy and did not produce the heat of the PA Energex, IMO. Nor of TSC's own brand name pellets. They heated my house, I would take them in a pinch. But with the P61 you can tell a good hot pellet because the stove radiates heat more with hot pellets vs lower BTU Pellets, Harman or not. Even my wife noticed that, she was camped out next to the stove most of last winter with a broken rib. With the FSU, she said lets not buy these again. Ya they burned, they got the house up to 73 same as hot pellets but you did not feel the same radiating heat from the stove. Just my experience with them.Are Fireside Ultras a product of Energex, Quebec?
Trebio are not a bad option and seemed to be carried by Wal-Mart. I got a ton of Sure-Fire from the Kenora Home Hardware (not carried at local one). Getting LaCrete's from the North American Lumber Store. Try Crappy Tire too - Firemaster, Trebio and Cannawick at the local one. Haven't tried the Cannawick yet...
Hardwoods will always take longer to Ignite than Softwood...I bought a dozen bags of Cannawick from crappy tire to try them out. The hardwoods. They seem to do the trick to keep the house warm at the moment.
Might want to plan on the LaCretes and Pinnacles for the middle of winter file:///C:/Users/Acer/Downloads/Wood%20Pellet%20Testing%202012.pdfI bought a dozen bags of Cannawick from crappy tire to try them out. The hardwoods. They seem to do the trick to keep the house warm at the moment.
Might want to plan on the LaCretes and Pinnacles for the middle of winter file:///C:/Users/Acer/Downloads/Wood%20Pellet%20Testing%202012.pdf
Some of the US brands tested are not available in Canada: http://woodpellets4me.com/pdf/2011-2012-PelletReview.pdf
Edit: LaCrete rating 8730 btu
Cannawick rating from their website is 8000 btu
The Tractor Supply brand in stock locally right now were produced by Maine Woods and tehy burn hot. The said they have no idea what will come in next. I bought PureFire there recently as well. And they also have Natures Own in stock, which they are perfectly welcome to keep Natures Own.. I told the girl that's the only pellet I ever returned to a store.Tractor Supply and other "store" brands can be from some pretty good manufacturers ... UPC codes are usually the way to track them ... see the sticky on UPC at the home page of pellet mill or enter the UPC code in the search box to see if its already been identified.
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