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Posted (edited)

Never been one for "banking" a fire with wood, always thought it wasn't best suited to it and it drives the chimney sweep nuts, so always tended towards using a drop of coal if I wanted the cooker kept in for a while.

 

However, coal has went a bit mad and I've plenty of wood of most types available so has anyone ever found any particular type of wood that was ideally suited to it?

 

I know hardwoods are generally better than softwoods but just curious if there's anything that just sits and slumbers cleanly that wee bit better than the rest?

 

 

Edited by coppice cutter

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Posted (edited)
12 minutes ago, coppice cutter said:

Never been one for "banking" a fire with wood, always thought it wasn't best suited to it and it drives the chimney sweep nuts, so always tended towards using a drop of coal if I wanted the cooker kept in for a while.

 

However, coal has went a bit mad and I've plenty of wood of most types available so has anyone ever found any particular type of wood that was ideally suited to it?

 

I know hardwoods are generally better than softwoods but just curious if there's anything that just sits and slumbers cleanly that wee bit better than the rest?

 

 

I don't think any wood slumbers " cleanly " However I sometimes put a big lump of Oak on last thing at night ( it being relatively slow burning ) and in the morning there are enough embers to get it going quite easily .

Edited by Stubby
  • Like 2
Posted

I slumber all hardwoods and just make sure to have 30 minutes to an hour hard fire in the morning with softwood. Never had an issue and Ive recently swept my liner after 12 months and it was clean as a whistle. Maybe a couple of pint glasses worth of soot. 

 

In fact we're heading out now for the afternoon and the kitchen Stove is banked right up with Oak and Beech and slumbered down. :D Will be cosy when we get home in a few hours. 

  • Like 2
Posted

When I was a lad we had big dead elms to split by hand, which quite often needed wedges and sledgehammer. If a particularly gnarly bit wouldn't split we'd put that aside for "a last thing at night piece"

 

Was never still burning in the morning though, just saved a lot of hammering.

  • Like 7
Posted (edited)

Oak definitely sprung to mind as you can hardly get the bugger to get a gee on when you do want a bit of heat in a hurry.

 

Also toying with pulling out the grate and ashpan and putting a bit of vermiculite board in the bottom instead to see how that works.

 

In my mind it should stay in better with whatever remaining wood sitting on a good bed of embers rather than having them falling through the grate.

 

Should add, it won't be staying in 24/7 and will still be re-lit every morning

Edited by coppice cutter
Posted
8 minutes ago, coppice cutter said:

Oak definitely sprung to mind as you can hardly get the bugger to get a gee on when you do want a bit of heat in a hurry.

 

Also toying with pulling out the grate and ashpan and putting a bit of vermiculite board in the bottom instead to see how that works.

 

In my mind it should stay in better with whatever remaining wood sitting on a good bed of embers rather than having them falling through the grate.

 

Should add, it won't be staying in 24/7 and will still be re-lit every morning

Mine is a wood only stove and has no grate so don't have that problem .

Posted

Yes, our wood only stove the same.

 

But this is a multi-fuel cooker which used to do domestic hot water and central heating. But since the stove was fitted it usually just does the hot water as the stove pretty much made the radiators superfluous.

Posted

I thought hornbeam was meant to burn well and burn for a long time? Worth a go if you have any.

 

I don't slumber our wood burner either, if it's been on all day and the last log goes on around 9pm it still often has embers glowing in the ash the next morning. 

  • Like 1

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