Riverbanks
Feeling the Heat
There is none of that in my area, too many scavengers who have the low down on it, heck, it's 5$ for a used pallet around here
You probably save more wood (as compared to 30% moisture content, if indeed you measured on a freshly split face), by burning this dry wood, than the 15% of wood you did not get.
Note that a cord is not a fixed amount of wood; it's stacked splits in a volume of 128 cubic foot. It does not specify how tightly one has to stack. So legally, it's a tough thing to deal with.
It says parallel and compact. That means no cribbing or bridging. I think if 10 people stacked wood as described, they would all come out within a few percent of each other in cubic feet. 15% is almost 20 cubic feet. That's a lot of wood missing.Yes, that's my point. "Well stowed" is not a quantifiable term. So it's a tough thing to deal with. My "good" may be your "sloppy" or vice versal.
I just paid a price like those mentioned in the thread on ridiculous prices for 1/2 a cord of wood. (Claimed seasoned, but two pieces I tested were 23%. Close enough?)
Dumped in my driveway, then I stacked it up.
Measuring generously, I get 54 cubic feet. Google tells me I should have 64.
Worth calling to ask about the difference? Or then am I just being an annoying customer? 15% seems not insignificant. Do I just cut my losses and buy somewhere else next time?
I seem to notice the height of my stacks dropping even more than 10%. Some small part of that could be settling, but I believe it's almost entirely shrinkage of the wood due to drying. If the 10% is on cross-sectional area, as we know length doesn't vary much with MC%, and the width is constrained at a fixed number, then it would make sense that the height shrinks more than 10%.Wood will shrink 10% between freshly split and dry (20% moisture). If you had gotten it from one of the seasoned wet wood guys, it would have been near a full cord. I can tell when the wood here is nearly done drying - the stacks stop heaving and leaning from all the uneven shrink going on, and will have dropped from 60" high to about 6" less.
Better go have a steak.... I'm going to have some smoked Pike.Right on, now I'm hungry, thanks
Ditto. Better yet, I'd have been tempted to bring out a lawn chair beer cooler, so I could sit and watch him work off his spite.If he wanted to load it back up, I'd have let him. A couple times calling his bluff and he wouldn't say that any more.
You sound like you're scared of anyone who might be trying to rip you off, Simon. I'd hate to live that way.Firewood guys are not sissies. They are physically strong blue collar types. They have axes. I bet, many of them have guns. We know he has a can of 2 stroke gasoline. Why, he might also have a cigarette lighter....
He knows where you live.
I didn't write any of that, at least today. Mod's having fun, or a forum glitch digging up old posts, and re-badging them with today's date?You sound like you're scared of anyone who might be trying to rip you off, Simon. I'd hate to live that way.
Personally, I'd do as I stated on page 1, let him know you were shorted, and tell him he can make it up on the next order. But at the same time, if dealing with an poophead who threatens to load back up at the first question, I'd not have any hesitation in pushing his buttons.
So what if he knows where I live? By your logic, law enforcement and the criminal justice system likely knows where he lives, if you're implying he's an arsonist willing to burn your house down over 15% of a $200 firewood deal.
I had my worst cord ever delivered last fall. It only stacked to 3/4, and that's AFTER I split the larger pieces into 3-4 additional. And it is not seasoned, even though he says it is. Issue is, he charges $200 delivered. Normally he is about 10-15% shy. And honestly, Ive NEVER had a full cord delivered ever. "around here", a cord is what fills a dump to a certain level and that's what everyone has accepted. EXCEPT when you stack it, it doesn't equal a cord! Whatever, as long as Im not paying an arm and a leg Im ok with it, but not if it is only to 75%. SO the guy agreed he owes me another 1/4 the next time. Which means, I might get a full cord next timeI just paid a price like those mentioned in the thread on ridiculous prices for 1/2 a cord of wood. (Claimed seasoned, but two pieces I tested were 23%. Close enough?)
Dumped in my driveway, then I stacked it up.
Measuring generously, I get 54 cubic feet. Google tells me I should have 64.
Worth calling to ask about the difference? Or then am I just being an annoying customer? 15% seems not insignificant. Do I just cut my losses and buy somewhere else next time?
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