Just curious, but does anyone know how fast wood dries when just cut in the round vs split? Obviously its slower, but just wondering how much slower on average I guess. How much faster than just leaving the wood in logs?
Depends whether you mean in the winter or the summer, because......boisblancboy said:Just curious, but does anyone know how fast wood dries when just cut in the round vs split? Obviously its slower, but just wondering how much slower on average I guess. How much faster than just leaving the wood in logs?
I wouldn't count on it. It might, it might not. It has to be split eventually anyway, so do it as soon as possible.boisblancboy said:Just curious, but does anyone know how fast wood dries when just cut in the round vs split? Obviously its slower, but just wondering how much slower on average I guess. How much faster than just leaving the wood in logs?
Back 30 some years ago when I measured seasoning time in weeks, I was scrounging logs from a local Birch plywood plant. I cut short rounds off the two ends to burn first since they had already dried some through the end grain and I cut everything short for my top load stove. One bonus was they were easier to split.Vic99 said:My experience has been that shorter rounds dry faster than longer rounds because evaporation takes place through the end grains.
One thing that might accelerate drying . . . buck to half the normal size. If you're normally fitting 16 inch length rounds into the stove, buck them up to 8 inch length rounds instead and then load the stove with them side by side. A bit more sawing, but an 8 inch round will dry faster than a 16 inch. At the very least, your wood will be drier and thus combust more completely given the same amount of drying time.
I think most of us leave an inch or two or three for error. My stove CAN take 18-18.5 inch splits, so I aim for 16-17 inch splits. Less hassle when loading, especially if you are tired and have blazing hot coals.
LLigetfa, I have always enjoyed your posts. One question is why do you order your wood by the truck load when it looks like you have plenty to spare onsite? I know you have the know how. Just tired of doing it since you had to do it for a living? Or do you get a really good deal since you work for a sawmill?LLigetfa said:Back 30 some years ago when I measured seasoning time in weeks, I was scrounging logs from a local Birch plywood plant. I cut short rounds off the two ends to burn first since they had already dried some through the end grain and I cut everything short for my top load stove. One bonus was they were easier to split.Vic99 said:My experience has been that shorter rounds dry faster than longer rounds because evaporation takes place through the end grains.
One thing that might accelerate drying . . . buck to half the normal size. If you're normally fitting 16 inch length rounds into the stove, buck them up to 8 inch length rounds instead and then load the stove with them side by side. A bit more sawing, but an 8 inch round will dry faster than a 16 inch. At the very least, your wood will be drier and thus combust more completely given the same amount of drying time.
I think most of us leave an inch or two or three for error. My stove CAN take 18-18.5 inch splits, so I aim for 16-17 inch splits. Less hassle when loading, especially if you are tired and have blazing hot coals.
Jags said:And I don't think you will live long enough to see any large rounds of White Oak dry while still in the round. Some wood will rot before drying in the round, so thats no good either.
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