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What does everyone do with their sawdust?


Doddy
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Would it be a viable proposition to use a sawdust/chip burner to run a crude firewood kiln.

 

I'm still thinking down the lines of greenhouse heater .. but combining it with a simple biochar retort along the lines of this ..

With a decent size sawdust burner underneath, possibly with the central channel permanently in place with perforated stainless tube, and a removable charcoal barrel.. a chimney to the side and a clamp on lid for the top..

You could set it all up in the evening for frost protection and by the time it gets filled up next day you will have a barrel full of charcoal, which could be lumpwood for barbecues or more sawdust/chip for small size biochar for mixing in with the greenhouse compost!

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My sawdust burner I made from 2 x 45 gall drums and an industrial air filter with the paper filter burnt away to leave a mesh cylinder laid on its side which I fill with sawdust. Light at the front and it will burn its way through to the back. The mesh acting like a davy lamp.

 

Will burn chip just as good as sawdust.

 

Would it work using a rectangular tank on the bottom? I have an old, narrow style diesel tank.

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I'm still thinking down the lines of greenhouse heater .. but combining it with a simple biochar retort along the lines of this ..

With a decent size sawdust burner underneath, possibly with the central channel permanently in place with perforated stainless tube, and a removable charcoal barrel.. a chimney to the side and a clamp on lid for the top..

You could set it all up in the evening for frost protection and by the time it gets filled up next day you will have a barrel full of charcoal, which could be lumpwood for barbecues or more sawdust/chip for small size biochar for mixing in with the greenhouse compost!

 

Doing something useful with the flared offgas is essential IMO. Overall we could do with a more holistic approach to our use of burning fuels for heat and charcoal making lends itself to using the by product heat to dry something and the heat from the dryer to heat something like a house.

 

Consider dry wood will achieve a flame temperature of 1600C though in practice keeping the combustion chamber around 800C saves damage whilst allowing a clean burn yet we use it to warm our houses to ~25C, all different temperatures but the heat flux is the same. So there is scope for running the heat users in a cascade.

 

If the wood you wish to char is fairly uniform and dry then a inverted downdraught gasifier (aka Top Lit Up Draught) will yield 25% of the original dry weight as char and a clean flame (which could do the drying).

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