Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

Recommended Posts

Posted
disagree with or inaccurate his seasoned logs are kiln dried so whats the problem in calling them what they are 30%mc kiln dried logs instead of branding them seasoned and impacting merchants who actually provide decent quality seasoned logs under 20% MC

 

 

 

and to the other comment he isn't trolling people yes he is, he's made his post knowing exactly the reaction he would get he's been on here a number of years now and knows the divide between kiln driers and air drying merchants and marketing his wet logs with the same reference as others use for ready to burn logs, it's confrontational!

 

 

Why is he impacting anyone else?

 

He is selling his products stating what they are.

 

You should concern yourself with your own offering imo

Log in or register to remove this advert

  • Replies 153
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

I have no issue with what Ash is doing, the fact he is shifting a good amount of logs shows he is getting something right. For me the crucial thing is honesty with customers about moisture content then being consistent in delivering what you claim. We could argue all day about what the terminology seasoned means.

On the subject of kiln dried it has often seemed a bit odd that some merchants are so against it. I see it as an opportunity. We are all in business, the fundamental object of which is to make a living/profit. Rightly or wrongly there is a big market out there for kiln dried. 1/3 of all our sales are kiln dried, on these sales we make more profit. At no point do we lie to customers we just say that the kiln dried are about 5-10% drier and let them decide. If they want kiln dried happy days, then it is down to the customer to decide if they are happy with what they buy. For me this is basic sensible business.

Judging by the houses of many of my customers buying kiln dried they are far from stupid. They can quickly work out what's what and make the choice on what they buy.

The log business is a tough place to make profit. If customers want to pay a premium let's make the most of the opportunity.

Posted

Il call it "force air dried in a timber framed box over a less time than our kiln dried hardwood"

rolls off the tongue that!

I hear "barn dried" in the firewood industry a lot, can anyone let me know what Moisture content that has to be?

Posted
Il call it "force air dried in a timber framed box over a less time than our kiln dried hardwood"

rolls off the tongue that!

I hear "barn dried" in the firewood industry a lot, can anyone let me know what Moisture content that has to be?

 

Easy, 25% or less

Posted
I use softwood "chipwood" mainly. It's sold as "chipwood" so if I don't buy it, it would be on its way to be burnt somewhere else, probably at 40%+ moisture in the biomass plant in port talbot

With the size of the P Talbot plant I too doubt if they have space to air dry their fuel, so as you say must go in at 40%+. They must use a step grate type system and use some combustion heat to dry the chip before it gets to the fire. A bit like your kiln drying but a bit more efficient.

 

Presumably you air dry your chipwood down to a reasonable level then chip it?You must have a fairly large efficient boiler so do you not find the RHI covers your fuel costs?

Posted
I have no issue with what Ash is doing, the fact he is shifting a good amount of logs shows he is getting something right. For me the crucial thing is honesty with customers about moisture content then being consistent in delivering what you claim. We could argue all day about what the terminology seasoned means.

 

On the subject of kiln dried it has often seemed a bit odd that some merchants are so against it. I see it as an opportunity. We are all in business, the fundamental object of which is to make a living/profit. Rightly or wrongly there is a big market out there for kiln dried. 1/3 of all our sales are kiln dried, on these sales we make more profit. At no point do we lie to customers we just say that the kiln dried are about 5-10% drier and let them decide. If they want kiln dried happy days, then it is down to the customer to decide if they are happy with what they buy. For me this is basic sensible business.

 

Judging by the houses of many of my customers buying kiln dried they are far from stupid. They can quickly work out what's what and make the choice on what they buy.

 

The log business is a tough place to make profit. If customers want to pay a premium let's make the most of the opportunity.

 

 

Finally someone who speaks some sense!

I'm now about 40-60% split from seasoned/kiln dried and kiln dried is catching up! The most simple thing to do in business is supply the demand!!

Posted
With the size of the P Talbot plant I too doubt if they have space to air dry their fuel, so as you say must go in at 40%+. They must use a step grate type system and use some combustion heat to dry the chip before it gets to the fire. A bit like your kiln drying but a bit more efficient.

 

 

 

Presumably you air dry your chipwood down to a reasonable level then chip it?You must have a fairly large efficient boiler so do you not find the RHI covers your fuel costs?

 

 

We've got a log boiler but buy what the supplier classes as softwood chipwood. Bought some pop cheap in the past as well, when dry it kicked out some insane heat!

yes the RHI payments easily cover the fuel costs.

Posted
We've got a log boiler but buy what the supplier classes as softwood chipwood. Bought some pop cheap in the past as well, when dry it kicked out some insane heat!

yes the RHI payments easily cover the fuel costs.

 

I thought you might have gone the chip boiler route. We have a 999kw chip boiler and apart from routine maintenance it runs itself. Around 92% efficient when we feed it decent softwood chip. From memory up to 93% but Sod's law says when we book a chipper it rains. Just chipped some that should come in at about 20% so a reasonable couple of days there. We also get a crazy amount of RHI on it.

Posted
I thought you might have gone the chip boiler route. We have a 999kw chip boiler and apart from routine maintenance it runs itself. Around 92% efficient when we feed it decent softwood chip. From memory up to 93% but Sod's law says when we book a chipper it rains. Just chipped some that should come in at about 20% so a reasonable couple of days there. We also get a crazy amount of RHI on it.

 

 

Funds unfortunately! Being quite a new company as we went LTD most finance companies wouldn't give us much so a chip boiler was out of the question. We didn't go through a biomass company for the second kiln and sourced the parts ourselves and got a local plumber to fit it so it costs just over £16k.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

  •  

About

Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
If you're just starting out and you need business, equipment, tech or training support you're in the right place.  If you've done it, made it, got a van load of oily t-shirts and have decided to give something back by sharing your knowledge or wisdom,  then you're welcome too.
If you would like to contribute to making this industry more effective and safe then welcome.
Just like a living tree, it'll always be a work in progress.
Please have a look around, sign up, share and contribute the best you have.

See you inside.

The Arbtalk Team

Follow us

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.