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Woodworks

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Everything posted by Woodworks

  1. It probably is. Do you think the BSL standard is what might be enforced on the whole industry?
  2. No that would be a first
  3. Impossible if you live in the wrong place and have a wet winter. had most of our just below 20% late Autumn but they have now crept up to over 20% with endless days of very high humidity. 4 dry days here since the beginning of December. If any future regulation stipulated below 20% we will have give up or build a kiln.
  4. Not a climber myself but used both types of system on the ground. My Buffalo is too hot for all but the coldest days. That thick pile is just to thick. Found a well worn one to be more useful. Bought a Paramo for casual use but when I found how nice they are it soon got used for my work. Just incredibly comfortable and great at keeping perspiration away when combined with a marino base. Again it is pretty warm but not as extreme as the Buffalo. Down side is they seem to a bit baggy in the cut. Every potential for it to catch on branches but to fair I have not damaged mine yet and apparently they do a very reasonably priced repair service. It only comes out for the wettest of days though as the fabric cant be the toughest.
  5. But if the secondly air does not get hot enough before it enters the firebox it does not combust. It may be that our stove is not great anyway but our old Woodwarm which drew the air from the room was far better at getting that rolling flam above the logs.
  6. I have read that but not convinced it's so good in reality. Cant see that freezing cold wet air is perfect for the fire and as I say our stove with it is fairly poor by modern standards IMO.
  7. Is this for a stove or open fire? We have a stove with a closed combustion system ie it brings it's combustion air in from outside through a pipe out the back. Maybe it's the stove but cant say I am impressed but was the only legal option as it's in an open plan room including a kitchen with extractor fan. Much preferred the old Woodwarm that used the air from the room.
  8. Ridiculous. Clicked below that add and there is a whole line of cheap tractors. A JCB fasttrack for less than you could weigh it for for scrap. I will just contact his mate to find out more....................
  9. Yes I know it's a long shot but I just had a processing customer who I cut a pile of softwood for last year to say she has burnt the lot and needs some logs now. Buying ready dried logs is going to cost a small fortune the way she is burning through them so hoping we could get a few forwarder loads to her and I would pop down and log it up for her. Part dry softwood or quick drying hardwood would be great. Destination is St Dominic Thanks
  10. Read a study some years back that in a centrally heated home it can have a negative overall effect. Literally sucks all the heat up the chimney and chucks outside.
  11. So depends on your rounds. I started with a trailer but have to deliver to so many awkward places a narrow truck proved why easier. Regular single cab with a Loadhandler works a treat plus some greedy boards.
  12. Your probably right Barry but they used to put it down and you would wonder what fictional forecast they had been looking at (not had any frights either way but I do drive like a grandad) Then the roads hang wet for a week while our untreated lanes are bone dry. To be fair with the council now being skint they seem to have taken to far less salting of the roads without any obvious issues.
  13. Yes you see that table doing the rounds and it's less than helpful and in accurate
  14. I love the idea but can see the potential drain issues but as Kevin points out there are far worse drain issues around these parts. Hate salted roads around here. Most of the time they do it the weather ends up being dry but all the salted roads hang wet so spend your time looking for ice patches. When the roads dry you know there is no ice but if you see wet you have to drive as if though there is an ice patch around the corner. Brutal to machines as well. My last processor went rusty almost overnight due to salt. Presure wash the new one down after every road tip in the winter now.
  15. Incase the OP has no idea what you lot are on about
  16. Thanks for that. Lost track of who I have contacted to be honest but could very quickly say who has got back to me
  17. It could be argued that the cost of panels has only being going one way for a long time and nothing to do with the FITS
  18. Fair play to them if that can make the sales. You see homes filled with far more useless nonsense
  19. Not really had any winter yet and this morning we have full on dawn chorus going on. Roll on spring
  20. One of the schemes used to let you know what the criteria was. Think we got lots of info at the Confor show one year. Moisture content, length in relation to advertised size and split dimensions required all freely available at the time. Never worried as we complied with most of it but I did take in the bit about nothing split larger than 6" as I was not fussy about this element at the time. We never signed up as being a small supplier the cost of being accredited was far more than any extra we might have been able to charge.
  21. That big? I thought one of the schemes required no split dimension greater than 150mm/6" Might have been Woodsure but I see they now charge to find out what the spec is https://shop.bsigroup.com/ProductDetail/?pid=000000000030244613 We aim for nothing bigger than 6" but not sure where I picked that up from.
  22. Very elegant
  23. Processing and delivery, I dont know to be honest. I sell softwood for £70 per cube as opposed to £100 for hardwood. Think this means the customer should at least get as many kWh per pound. I can sell it when I push it but dont get customers asking for it. At the end of the day the customers want as much energy as possible in as little space as possible and this is reflected in the fact a lot of them use coal as well as wood. Softwood is at the other end of scale for energy density. Also I am trying to maximise profit for the smallest turnover as space is limited. No interest in selling 1000s of cube for diddly squat
  24. Oh no! Thought you would be safe with a Hilux. Hope your problems get sorted and it works out OK in the long run. Got to say I cant fault my 2009 Hilux. Just been for it's MOT on 120K and it needed a new bulb and that was it. Yes it was the delightful Snows who were utterly hopeless.
  25. Your weights are out. If they were correct both pine and beech would sink in water which they don't. 1m3 of water weighs 1tonne so 1m3 of wood that floats must weigh less. Yes beech can sink in water. Had a thread years back on the same lines. Posted a picture of the sample of beech sitting at the bottom of a filled bucket. Never tested fresh softwood but my back says it's not far off the weight of beech

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