Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 23 Jan 2019, 10:26 am

The deer were pretty active too going by the prints everywhere.

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It must of been cold that day as the creek was frozen!
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Daddybang » 23 Jan 2019, 1:43 pm

Yep that looks like a great time mate :thumbsup: :drinks:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigpete » 23 Jan 2019, 2:49 pm

bigfellascott wrote:
bigpete wrote:I wish I had a wood fire....


What's stopping ya Pete?


Money,and no real place place to put it
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Die Judicii » 23 Jan 2019, 9:06 pm

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Yep, I love a wood fire when it gets cold.
But I made sure I don't raise a sweat when I'm splitting it up. :lol: :thumbsup:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 23 Jan 2019, 9:17 pm

bigpete wrote:
bigfellascott wrote:
bigpete wrote:I wish I had a wood fire....


What's stopping ya Pete?


Money,and no real place place to put it


That sucks Pete, you can get 2nd hand ones pretty cheap, a mate bought his for around $400 and it's a bloody rippa wood heater, sure punches out good heat! :thumbsup:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 23 Jan 2019, 9:20 pm

Die Judicii wrote:
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Yep, I love a wood fire when it gets cold.
But I made sure I don't raise a sweat when I'm splitting it up. :lol: :thumbsup:


Nice setup Ed, what's the story? Yep splittings a bitch and so is loading it into the ute (it really knocks the piss out of me now I can tell ya) this year is really going to be hard on me I think, hopefully, I can get enough in before it gets too cold. :unknown:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bladeracer » 24 Jan 2019, 6:35 am

bigfellascott wrote:Nice setup Ed, what's the story? Yep splittings a bitch and so is loading it into the ute (it really knocks the piss out of me now I can tell ya) this year is really going to be hard on me I think, hopefully, I can get enough in before it gets too cold. :unknown:


We have a log splitter that comes out every week to split wood for us, been coming for over 40 years I believe.
But at 77-years-old now his shoulders are feeling it.
So we bought a log splitter last year for him - he loves it!
I'm really impressed with it. He splits logs for a couple hours every week and it's never missed a beat.
https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Baumr-AG-20-Ton-Electric-Log-Splitter-20T-Hydraulic-Fire-Wood-Block-Cutter-Axe/131778641213
I didn't get it off Ebay but this is the same model we have.
He's finally been able to split the rock-hard stuff that he's had to put aside the last few years, this beast just rips through it.

I wanted to get a petrol one so we could take it out to the fallen trees and cut and split them on-site. But most of its work will be right near the house and I can use a generator if I want to take it out. This thing is virtually silent compared to a petrol engine.
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 24 Jan 2019, 7:22 am

That looks like a good little setup you have there BR, what type of wood do you burn where you are?

When I come across a piece I can't split I just get the chainsaw onto it as a rule (usually forky stuff) most of the other stuff if it's tuff I just knock the sides off it as it were instead of the usual splitting in half, then half again type thing like most do, I find knocking the sides off makes it easy to do and doable as it were.
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 24 Jan 2019, 7:35 am

This video demonstrates what I mean by knocking the sides off the wood that is harder to split, you will also see him try and split it the more traditional way by splitting in half then half again and you can see the difference in how knocking the sides off is to going more traditional.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTroXIXQHIY
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Die Judicii » 24 Jan 2019, 5:50 pm

bigfellascott wrote:This video demonstrates what I mean by knocking the sides off the wood that is harder to split, you will also see him try and split it the more traditional way by splitting in half then half again and you can see the difference in how knocking the sides off is to going more traditional.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTroXIXQHIY


Demonstrates yes,, but it is the straightest of straight grain firewood that isn't a challenge to split, especially by hand.
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by TassieTiger » 24 Jan 2019, 6:50 pm

12mm Drilled holes in some reels, with some compressed adi powder, with a sparkler fuse, allegedly splits wood quite nicely. So I’ve heard...
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Stix » 24 Jan 2019, 7:21 pm

Wrong thread...
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Stix » 24 Jan 2019, 7:41 pm

bigfellascott wrote:This video demonstrates what I mean by knocking the sides off the wood that is harder to split, you will also see him try and split it the more traditional way by splitting in half then half again and you can see the difference in how knocking the sides off is to going more traditional.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTroXIXQHIY


Yea bigfella...thats the go, its how i split it too... !! :thumbsup:
He explains it well.:thumbsup:
Its ultimately the best & most efficient way ive found to attak a log...
That vid is a good find for a newbee to splitting firewood

Beats the hell out of what some other heros do--see them with a heap of wedges driven into a log or round & trying to go through a knot that will outlast the earth, & they keep battling & drive the wedges in & end up using a chainsaw... :lol:

Its also good as using that method you often get smaller bits &/or its easier to split smaller bits needed from all the sap wood/outside of log... :thumbsup:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Die Judicii » 24 Jan 2019, 8:57 pm

bigfellascott wrote:
Nice setup Ed, what's the story? :


I could see the day would come when I run outta breath, and struggle with fire wood,,,,,,,
So I gathered up bits and pieces and built my own machine.
The crane is also hydraulically slewed 360 degrees, and is mounted on a semi trailer turntable to allow for rotation.
The chassis that everything is sitting on top of is part of a WW 2 Mack Truck.

The splitter itself develops 94.5 tons per square inch at the cutting end of business. :thumbsup:
I have actually cut hardwood logs up to around 6" diameter straight across the grain with it.
The splitting blade is one I developed over time with successive shapes and profiles, and is near tool steel hardness

When I first finished building it a friend of mine looked it over and declared that it was grossly over engineered. :wtf:
I proved him wrong a month later when I actually bent the I beam that runs underneath.
I was cutting up River Red gum stumps with it at the time.

Now, it has double I beams, and has never bent again.

When I used to have to get firewood by permit from state forests etc, I used to follow where other people had already taken the easy stuff, and left the twisty forked sections behind, these are easy for this machine to handle and the tougher wood usually makes for better burning.

The biggest problem I have in my current location is that I can't get timber as big as what I used to be able to access.
The largest I've ever cut up with it was rings of redgum just on 6 foot diameter.
I had bought these, and they were unloaded off the truck one at a time.
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bladeracer » 25 Jan 2019, 6:13 am

bigfellascott wrote:That looks like a good little setup you have there BR, what type of wood do you burn where you are?


I had to check with Rose :-)
She says most of what we burn is difficult to identify with certainty after laying in a paddock for a decade or two.
Mostly eucalypts, some blackwood, occasionally some pine and oak, and probably some others as well. Anything that falls goes through the stove eventually.

We saw it into ute-lengths, cart it up to the shed, stack any green stuff to dry, then cut the dry stuff into stove-lengths with the swing saw. Then split them and stack them in the wood shed with the snakes and spiders. Every week a heap gets barrowed down to the stack at the back door.
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bladeracer » 25 Jan 2019, 6:36 am

TassieTiger wrote:12mm Drilled holes in some reels, with some compressed adi powder, with a sparkler fuse, allegedly splits wood quite nicely. So I’ve heard...


Bob told me he has one of those powder wedges that you fill with blackpowder somewhere but I haven't found it yet. You have to drill a hole with the auger first then fill this thing up and hammer it into the log, spike it to the log with a chain so it doesn't disappear over the horizon, light some slow match cord and run away.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O_iH1ESyYuc
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 25 Jan 2019, 7:18 am

bladeracer wrote:
bigfellascott wrote:That looks like a good little setup you have there BR, what type of wood do you burn where you are?


I had to check with Rose :-)
She says most of what we burn is difficult to identify with certainty after laying in a paddock for a decade or two.
Mostly eucalypts, some blackwood, occasionally some pine and oak, and probably some others as well. Anything that falls goes through the stove eventually.

We saw it into ute-lengths, cart it up to the shed, stack any green stuff to dry, then cut the dry stuff into stove-lengths with the swing saw. Then split them and stack them in the wood shed with the snakes and spiders. Every week a heap gets barrowed down to the stack at the back door.


Yep I'm the same mate, I wouldn't have a clue about a lot of the wood I burn either, to me it's wood and it will put out some sort of heat so burn the bloody stuff :lol:

I get pine offcuts from the local mill, they come in handy when you want to get a fire going quickly and they put out good heat (they don't burn real long but it's great for getting the fire cranked up quickly) and it's free so we just get the backhoe to drop a load in the ute and off we go. :drinks:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 26 Jan 2019, 6:35 am

Die Judicii wrote:
bigfellascott wrote:This video demonstrates what I mean by knocking the sides off the wood that is harder to split, you will also see him try and split it the more traditional way by splitting in half then half again and you can see the difference in how knocking the sides off is to going more traditional.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTroXIXQHIY


Demonstrates yes,, but it is the straightest of straight grain firewood that isn't a challenge to split, especially by hand.


True Ed but the principles the same, knock the sides off if she's hard splitting. I have some box here that was hard to split the conventional way so gave the "knocking the sides off" method a go and it was much easier to deal with. :drinks:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Daddybang » 26 Jan 2019, 7:48 am

bigfellascott wrote:
bladeracer wrote:
bigfellascott wrote:That looks like a good little setup you have there BR, what type of wood do you burn where you are?


I had to check with Rose :-)
She says most of what we burn is difficult to identify with certainty after laying in a paddock for a decade or two.
Mostly eucalypts, some blackwood, occasionally some pine and oak, and probably some others as well. Anything that falls goes through the stove eventually.

We saw it into ute-lengths, cart it up to the shed, stack any green stuff to dry, then cut the dry stuff into stove-lengths with the swing saw. Then split them and stack them in the wood shed with the snakes and spiders. Every week a heap gets barrowed down to the stack at the back door.


Yep I'm the same mate, I wouldn't have a clue about a lot of the wood I burn either, to me it's wood and it will put out some sort of heat so burn the bloody stuff :lol:

I get pine offcuts from the local mill, they come in handy when you want to get a fire going quickly and they put out good heat (they don't burn real long but it's great for getting the fire cranked up quickly) and it's free so we just get the backhoe to drop a load in the ute and off we go. :drinks:



We have to be very careful with the wood we burn(or at least know exactly what it is) as some trees can have nasty effects if ya breathe the smoke including hallucinations or in extreme cases death. :D :thumbsup: :drinks:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 26 Jan 2019, 8:19 am

Wow - I don’t think we have worry about anything like that here thank god.
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 02 Feb 2019, 11:03 am

Went out yesterday with a couple of mates to start cutting firewood for the upcoming winter, 3 loads of Stringy and Peppermint were cut, some for me and the rest for a customer of my mates.

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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bladeracer » 02 Feb 2019, 11:14 am

Daddybang wrote:We have to be very careful with the wood we burn(or at least know exactly what it is) as some trees can have nasty effects if ya breathe the smoke including hallucinations or in extreme cases death. :D :thumbsup: :drinks:


What about CCA Treated Pine - is burning this stuff actually dangerous?
Bob here never worried about it, if it looked like wood it went in the stove.
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Daddybang » 02 Feb 2019, 4:36 pm

bladeracer wrote:
Daddybang wrote:We have to be very careful with the wood we burn(or at least know exactly what it is) as some trees can have nasty effects if ya breathe the smoke including hallucinations or in extreme cases death. :D :thumbsup: :drinks:


What about CCA Treated Pine - is burning this stuff actually dangerous?
Bob here never worried about it, if it looked like wood it went in the stove.


Don't know about treated pine I've burnt pallets and coppers logs and ended up with a very sore throat but I've felt the same after burning untreated black cypress logs(very handy for keeping mozzies down in camp
:D )
There's a few rainforest trees that the murris use for some of their corrobees and they get some very interesting result from burning them and inhaling the smoke. :thumbsup: :drinks:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Stix » 02 Feb 2019, 6:14 pm

Daddybang wrote:
bladeracer wrote:
Daddybang wrote:We have to be very careful with the wood we burn(or at least know exactly what it is) as some trees can have nasty effects if ya breathe the smoke including hallucinations or in extreme cases death. :D :thumbsup: :drinks:


What about CCA Treated Pine - is burning this stuff actually dangerous?
Bob here never worried about it, if it looked like wood it went in the stove.


Don't know about treated pine I've burnt pallets and coppers logs and ended up with a very sore throat but I've felt the same after burning untreated black cypress logs(very handy for keeping mozzies down in camp
:D )
There's a few rainforest trees that the murris use for some of their corrobees and they get some very interesting result from burning them and inhaling the smoke. :thumbsup: :drinks:


Its not dangerous to burn CCA treated timber...but given its treated with Copper, Chrome & Arsenic you probably dont want to be breathing in the fumes/smoke.. :thumbsdown:

I love the smell of Cypress...its so nice to cut & nice sweet smell when burning... :thumbsup: :clap:
:drinks:

Termites dont like the taste either... (well the termites down here anyway--dunno about the the supercharged hulk versions you breed up there.. :lol: . :crazy: ) :D
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Daddybang » 03 Feb 2019, 7:31 am

Stix wrote:
Daddybang wrote:
bladeracer wrote:
Daddybang wrote:We have to be very careful with the wood we burn(or at least know exactly what it is) as some trees can have nasty effects if ya breathe the smoke including hallucinations or in extreme cases death. :D :thumbsup: :drinks:


What about CCA Treated Pine - is burning this stuff actually dangerous?
Bob here never worried about it, if it looked like wood it went in the stove.


Don't know about treated pine I've burnt pallets and coppers logs and ended up with a very sore throat but I've felt the same after burning untreated black cypress logs(very handy for keeping mozzies down in camp
:D )
There's a few rainforest trees that the murris use for some of their corrobees and they get some very interesting result from burning them and inhaling the smoke. :thumbsup: :drinks:


Its not dangerous to burn CCA treated timber...but given its treated with Copper, Chrome & Arsenic you probably dont want to be breathing in the fumes/smoke.. :thumbsdown:

I love the smell of Cypress...its so nice to cut & nice sweet smell when burning... :thumbsup: :clap:
:drinks:

Termites dont like the taste either... (well the termites down here anyway--dunno about the the supercharged hulk versions you breed up there.. :lol: . :crazy: ) :D


Yeah stix it's one of my favorite bush timbers I'm lucky enough to have quite a bit of qld bush cypress and black cypress growing on my blovk so we use quite a bit of it for posts . :D
I am looking at building a saw to make it easier to cut the logs into planks to build a little cabin at some point (hard to get good planks with the little chainsaw I own). Posts i have put in the ground six or seven years ago haven't been eaten by the termites yet. :thumbsup: :drinks:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 03 Feb 2019, 11:20 am

Daddybang wrote:
Stix wrote:
Daddybang wrote:
bladeracer wrote:
Daddybang wrote:We have to be very careful with the wood we burn(or at least know exactly what it is) as some trees can have nasty effects if ya breathe the smoke including hallucinations or in extreme cases death. :D :thumbsup: :drinks:


What about CCA Treated Pine - is burning this stuff actually dangerous?
Bob here never worried about it, if it looked like wood it went in the stove.


Don't know about treated pine I've burnt pallets and coppers logs and ended up with a very sore throat but I've felt the same after burning untreated black cypress logs(very handy for keeping mozzies down in camp
:D )
There's a few rainforest trees that the murris use for some of their corrobees and they get some very interesting result from burning them and inhaling the smoke. :thumbsup: :drinks:


Its not dangerous to burn CCA treated timber...but given its treated with Copper, Chrome & Arsenic you probably dont want to be breathing in the fumes/smoke.. :thumbsdown:

I love the smell of Cypress...its so nice to cut & nice sweet smell when burning... :thumbsup: :clap:
:drinks:

Termites dont like the taste either... (well the termites down here anyway--dunno about the the supercharged hulk versions you breed up there.. :lol: . :crazy: ) :D


Yeah stix it's one of my favorite bush timbers I'm lucky enough to have quite a bit of qld bush cypress and black cypress growing on my blovk so we use quite a bit of it for posts . :D
I am looking at building a saw to make it easier to cut the logs into planks to build a little cabin at some point (hard to get good planks with the little chainsaw I own). Posts i have put in the ground six or seven years ago haven't been eaten by the termites yet. :thumbsup: :drinks:


I'd be looking at a 394/395 husky or 066 stihl to do some milling with and an alaskan saw mill would probably be fine for what you want DB. :thumbsup:
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 06 Mar 2019, 10:15 am

Finally got the new extension to a stage where I could put the wood heater in. Just in time for the cold front that's apparently heading our way. :thumbsup:

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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by southwest shooter » 06 Mar 2019, 11:35 am

We finally got nuclear power , cheap as chips ! Reliable for the cold winters.
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by Runnymede » 06 Mar 2019, 4:47 pm

Blimey is that an axe bigfellascott? I haven’t used one of those since I got my hydraulic log splitter which are a god send. I heat my house primarily with wood as bottled gas here is way too expensive to use full time. I have a wood fire with a wet back that heats water and when up to temp a pump kicks in and pumps it around the house and heats the house via radiators (hydronic heating I believe is the correct term?) It is very effective with the only downside being it’s a hungry beast and the way my wife burns wood it’s a full time job keeping up. Oh well at least it’s cheap as it really is just my time and some fuel for chainsaws and the splitter. Having two teenage sons to “help” split wood helps too :D
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Re: Who here uses firewood to heat their homes in winter?

Post by bigfellascott » 06 Mar 2019, 6:56 pm

Runnymede wrote:Blimey is that an axe bigfellascott? I haven’t used one of those since I got my hydraulic log splitter which are a god send. I heat my house primarily with wood as bottled gas here is way too expensive to use full time. I have a wood fire with a wet back that heats water and when up to temp a pump kicks in and pumps it around the house and heats the house via radiators (hydronic heating I believe is the correct term?) It is very effective with the only downside being it’s a hungry beast and the way my wife burns wood it’s a full time job keeping up. Oh well at least it’s cheap as it really is just my time and some fuel for chainsaws and the splitter. Having two teenage sons to “help” split wood helps too :D


Yeah mate axe and log splitter is all I usually need mind you I will have to get my mates hydronic log splitter as I have some twisted grain gum here that won’t split after being hit 20+ times.

We mostly burn stringy and peppermint here so a hydronic logsplitter isn’t really needed. We do get some red box and yellow box and some red gum too but mostly the other two.

Yours sounds like a great set up mate - I also have an ol Rayburn wood oven which used to have a hot water jacket in it until last year that is after I killed it.

I ran the heater all day today and fired up a pedestal fan to circulate the heat and wholly hell its bloody hot in the whole house.

She will be lovely and warm in here when winter is in full swing I’m sure.
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