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Can you give me 6inches!


timberbear
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Had a very upset lady from our local village ring me late last night, she was after six inch logs. She had just paid two grand to have a very nice new fire installed. The company which installed it told her there would be no problem getting the size she wanted. Oh how wrong the were. I told her I'm only a ten inch man! After a lot of sobbing on the phone,ImageUploadedByTapatalk1351424884.800393.jpg.3516443226f10b6d0da41a3599f32f0b.jpg I decided to go and measure her fire, and yes you can just about get six inches in there. So being the type of feller I am I've just done her a cubic meter of six inches, but what a pain in the butt it was. Lucky for her I had a load of soft wood which was so dry she will want another load next week! So the moral of the story is " before you buy a fire make sure you can get the size of wood you want"

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I cleared up a few years back by selling shorter lengths, as the local suppliers only cut to 50cm- standard size for a french woodburner, I was cutting 10" for my Rayburn anyway, and a friend wanted a cube to see how it went, his wife loved the fact that she could easily lift the logs into the fire, and I have never had to cut a 20" log since!

 

They say size isn't everything, but "they" are wrong!

It often pays to measure a ladies " fireplace" before trying to force anything too big in, trust me!:thumbup:

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I cleared up a few years back by selling shorter lengths, as the local suppliers only cut to 50cm- standard size for a french woodburner, I was cutting 10" for my Rayburn anyway, and a friend wanted a cube to see how it went, his wife loved the fact that she could easily lift the logs into the fire, and I have never had to cut a 20" log since!

 

They say size isn't everything, but "they" are wrong!

It often pays to measure a ladies " fireplace" before trying to force anything too big in, trust me!:thumbup:

 

:lol::lol::lol:

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