Jump to content

Log in or register to remove this advert

Big J

Veteran Member
  • Posts

    9,213
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    46

Everything posted by Big J

  1. My old forklift was called Sideshift Bob and it's replacement (a lumpy beast of a Nissan) is called Neville. That's about it for machinery - I tend to name my cars. I've had a Mitsubishi Shogun called Bish Bash, the Navara is called Dara, the old Mercedes 308D tipper was called Jurgen and my old LDV tipper was called Randy.
  2. I have the Makita DCS7901 which I suppose is the direct rival to the MS460/461. It goes like **** off a shovel, is lighter than the 460, more powerful and almost £200 cheaper: Makita DCS7901 79cc 2-Stroke Petrol Chainsaw 45cm with Decompressor | www.tools4trade.com
  3. If the logs are worth milling, I would mill the as the value per tonne is hugely more. I would expect 6 tonnes to yield about 15 split, loose cubic metres, so what ever you can get for it per cube, times 15!
  4. Good firewood = any dry timber Bad firewood = any wet timber I'm very happy with the 2 year seasoned willow that's on the fire at present. No real difference between that and the extremely slow grown suppressed ash felled 18 months ago. Burn the fir!
  5. I just posted a huge thread here on the milling section! The kiln I use is 18ft x 7ft x 8ft. If you work out the volume and then scale it down for your operations, it should work fine. Btw, I've still not had any Elm burr through - getting a load first thing in January and will make sure that last section wings it's way to you
  6. No problems. I made sure to ask my wife to ensure I had my facts straight. She's an architect and her practice only do the very best green buildings. Interestingly though, it is very difficult indeed to insulate old buildings to any great degree. She did a steading conversion a couple of years ago and it took 300mm of internal insulation to get the building up to regs. They never usually just go to regs, but in this instance it wasn't possible to improve beyond that without losing too much room space. Best thing we can do is try to, in places, detach ourselves emotionally from our aging housing stock, demolish and rebuild. It's just not possible to turn an old building into a green building.
  7. Interior or exterior insulation. Interior isn't as effective and impinges on room sizes and still has issues of cold bridging where interior walls join exterior walls. Exterior is more effective but there are issues with planning, the eaves detail where it meets the roof and it's not as effective on a very thick wall (ie 600mm). Generally better than internal insulation as there are no thermal bridges (continuous envelope). As you say, the cavity is there for a reason and shouldn't be filled. There is no ideal solution, and insulation should be done on an individual house by house basis. The best thing we could do in terms of energy conservation is to knock down most of our existing house stock and build proper houses! Every material has a vapour permeability rating, with many materials classed as moisture permeable. There are quite a range for EWI and IWI that will do this. I do agree that there are potentially costs as opposed to cavity wall insulation, but it can't be overstressed how unhealthy a damp house is. I'd rather live in a cold house than a damp house anyday.
  8. That is unfortunately normally the case. You may get slightly better thermal properties in the wall, but the foam that is injected isn't moisture permeable meaning that moisture is unable to escape through the wall. To anyone thinking of getting cavity wall insulation, don't! There are much more effective ways of insulating your home. The government have jumped onto the green wagon with this one though and offer grants for something that generally creates more issues than it solves.
  9. Yes, shut it. Make sure that the fire is good and hot first though. We also have a Villager stove, though I think a different model. I disagree. Shutting the air down doesn't necessarily mean that it is going to smoulder. I run both my stove and my Rayburn overnight but they don't smoulder. With dry timber, a good bed on the fire and a controlled air flow, you have the recipe for a good, slow, clean burn. Lots of air into the stove doesn't necessarily mean a clean chimney but it definitely means wasted fuel.
  10. Showers aren't too bad as you can contain the moisture within the bathroom, but indoor drying of washing is a tricky one. Unless you have a well ventilated room with a good heat source, you can cause a lot of issues with damp, mould and breathing related illnesses. At 250w (the rating of your dehumidifier), you are using 70 pence of electricity a day to keep the house dry - another option would be a tumble dryer, which uses 4-5kw (44-55 pence) and doesn't create the same indoor air quality issues. Jonathan
  11. Air control is the key. Get a flue thermometer - best £12 you can spend on a stove. Ensure that prior to closing it down, you get the temp fairly high (top of safe zone) and then close vents. You would fully stoke the fire prior to bringing the temperature up. Make sure every last cubic inch of the firebox is full or timber. Species of timber is important too. I find scrub elm to burn longer than anything else. Cherry is a close second.
  12. In older houses, they were never constructed to deal with the amount of water that we now use in our houses. So washing machines, dishwashers, showers, baths, indoor bathrooms etc. This is where you get moisture from in a house, as well as human/animal respiration of course. Modern houses are constructed better in terms of moisture management with moisture permeable membranes such as Tyvek. In older houses, a lime or clay plaster is a very useful tool for moisture management. The difficulty that we have personally is that we like in an old rented estate cottage, and due to the damp crappy summers we have had lately, there is almost no way to keep the house dry in summer except for dehumidification. When it's 18 degrees and 80% RH outside, it's going to be the same inside. A clay or lime plaster would really help, but it's not our house. Generally speaking, the housing stock in this country is very poor, whether it's old or new.
  13. Have you considered a heat recovery unit for moisture control in winter (less effective in summer due to temperature differential indoor/outdoor being smaller)? A HRU like this one: Vent Axia Manrose Heat Recovery Ventilation Fan Unit - Bathroom Shower Kitchen | eBay On trickle setting will pull out quite a bit of water with almost no electrical cost. You also get decent ventilation with 70% heat recovery. For instance, if the outdoor temperature is 0 celcius and 80% humidity and indoor temperature is 20 celcius and 50% humidity, there is 4g/cubic metre water coming in for every 10g water going out. At 43 cubic metres an hour, you are going to extract just over 6 litres of water a day for a cost of 12w (a daily electrical saving of 5.71kw/ 68 pence). Just an idea - it's the same principle I kiln my timber on. I like heat recovery units as they are so simple - very little to break down. Jonathan
  14. Lots of stunning quality Elm out of the kiln now at 1.5 inch (40mm) thickness. Boards up to 27 inches wide and around 8ft long. It's the best straight elm I've had, and the colouring is wonderful. Price is £40 a cubic foot plus VAT, but if you order over £500 plus VATs worth, there is a 10% discount this week. I hate December - very quiet on the timber sales front until about the 4th or 5th of January. Also, truly lovely quality pippy Oak (kiln dried) at 1.25 and 1.5 inches. One side straight edged (3ft diameter plus tree halved with chainsaw mill and then popped onto the woodmizer). No defects at all - completely flat, no shake or checking. £41 a cubic foot plus VAT. Same 10% offer applies. Boards up to 18 inches wide and 9ft long. Also plenty of Cedar, beech, Lime and some Ash. PM for details. Jonathan
  15. I must have shown that video to a good dozen different people in the last 6 months. Different times!
  16. Great cladding timber - is there anyone in the area that can take it? There is no finer cladding - extremely quick to dry (and dries far flatter than larch) and lovely figure/grain. Jonathan
  17. That is mental! Are you actually able to wear any clothes in your house, or are tiny sauna towels costume de rigueur?
  18. Fair enough I suppose. Wood burners have come on a long way recently. Our stove and Rayburn are fairly low maintenance and produce very little ash (one 20 litre bucket per 3 weeks, for 3 cubic metres burned). Jonathan
  19. You've got a free supply of heat that is processed at the expense of the business Stephen. I say go for it. I love our Rayburn - it is the heart of the house and rather than heating being something that you basically ignore (except for when the gas bill comes in), it becomes something you lovingly prepare and care for. We do almost all our cooking on ours, as well as getting heating and hot water. The best thing is that you are in control of your fuel costs - not at the whim of energy companies.
  20. I think that we've had this discussion before, but where you are in the country will hugely affect the MC of logs you are drying. Northamptonshire is one of the driest places in the country, both in terms of rainfall and relative humidity. In Edinburgh, we are probably somewhere in the middle, but you would genuinely struggle to ever get logs below 20% on the west coast of Scotland or parts of Wales. Sub 25% is fine. If customers are having issues with timber of that MC, it's most likely because they don't know how to operate the stove. Jonathan
  21. Hi Chris, and welcome to the forum. Just plant birch. I felled one yesterday in a stand of mainly Oak and sycamore to favour the Oak. I love birch and hate felling decent specimens, but that's the job specification. This tree was less than 50 years old, 18 inches diameter and 75ft tall. At least a tonne of timber in it, despite growing in a fairly exposed (to north easterlies) position. I've worked in other stands on the estate with 15 year old birch 40ft tall and 8 inch DBH. For clean, trouble free timber, just plant birch!
  22. Sod 'em. If people had half a brain they would be stocking up at the start of spring for the following winter, rather than waiting until the middle of winter to order. I am constantly amazed by the number of people that don't know how to a) correctly store firewood b) correctly operate a stove. It's so bloody simple - get any timber and get it dry. Doesn't have to be any specific species (though they all have their own burning characteristics). Light your stove, get it to temperature (get a flue thermometer - best £12 you can spend) and enjoy. Even my neighbour, who is more or less reliant on her stove for her heat can't use it properly. 'Just ticking over' equates to two logs smouldering tarring up the chimney giving off no heat. Rant over!
  23. Big J

    Lime

    That would still be useful. You can tell a reasonable amount from a standing stem. If push comes to shove, I'm in Derbyshire from the 23rd to the 27th and can always have a look at it for you. Jonathan
  24. Big J

    Lime

    Yes, if the quality is good enough. I milled a 120 cubic foot stem (26ft long, 34 inch diameter) in February. It was very clean and produced excellent quality boards. I cut them at 3 and 4 inches thick with wood turners in mind and I've probably sold about half of it so far. It dries very quickly, with the three inch stock down to 25% MC by October. I've kilned most of the remainder. Some of it has gone for a kitchen (this lime was relatively hard) and it's turned out beautifully (though the photos don't really do it justice): If you want to pop up a picture of the lime, I'll give you my best opinion as to whether to mill it. Jonathan

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.