Maybe someone has a better figure than myself, but I'd guess that bark etc makes up less than 5% of a typical fuel load? How much can it add to the particulate number? By simply stripping the bark off your typical piece of firewood it is suddenly able to get a campfire to pass emissions standards? Toungue in cheek humour right? Knowing that bark is so dirty, you must already strip it from all your wood before buring...if you don't than isn't that akin to burning high MC wood? Oh the shame... ;-)
It would be interesting to see what intermittent loads do to the numbers. IIRC CB is claiming to be 3x better than the spec with the 2400. I wonder if cycling would put them over. Trouble with that is all houses/installations are going to cyle differently, so what minimum number of cycles do you put on a boiler test spec?
It would be interesting to see what intermittent loads do to the numbers. IIRC CB is claiming to be 3x better than the spec with the 2400. I wonder if cycling would put them over. Trouble with that is all houses/installations are going to cyle differently, so what minimum number of cycles do you put on a boiler test spec?