Outdoor Wood Furnace Info

All-Purpose OWF Discussions => General Outdoor Furnace Discussion => Topic started by: coolidge on October 31, 2014, 03:41:29 AM

Title: Cord gone
Post by: coolidge on October 31, 2014, 03:41:29 AM
Been heating the shop and the DHW for the house since the 2nd week of Sept. Just finishing my first cord.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: ijon on October 31, 2014, 05:25:52 AM
Face cord or federal?
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: coolidge on October 31, 2014, 01:58:41 PM
Federal
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: Cabo on October 31, 2014, 05:55:49 PM
Good to hear from someone on wood usage.  I was just thinking about that today when I finished my first skid of wood (1/3 cord).  I've been running for 13 days but had nothing to compare to.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: mlappin on October 31, 2014, 11:13:20 PM
Haven't even started mine yet. Locked in my nat gas price awhile ago, so until it gets super cold no point in not using the natural gas. Also good to get some use out of the furnace as well to make sure alls well. My back is still too jacked to think about cutting anymore wood for awhile anyways.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: BoilerHouse on November 01, 2014, 08:08:48 AM
Been burning since Oct 1 and have used a bit less than a half cord.  This a.m. there is an inch of snow on the ground.  It is a winter wonderland.  It's the hap....happiest time of the year!!
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: victor6deep on November 01, 2014, 09:29:18 AM
Haven't even started mine yet. Locked in my nat gas price awhile ago, so until it gets super cold no point in not using the natural gas. Also good to get some use out of the furnace as well to make sure alls well. My back is still too jacked to think about cutting anymore wood for awhile anyways.

Chiropractor dude.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: Jwood on November 01, 2014, 06:23:24 PM
Haven't even started mine yet. Locked in my nat gas price awhile ago, so until it gets super cold no point in not using the natural gas. Also good to get some use out of the furnace as well to make sure alls well. My back is still too jacked to think about cutting anymore wood for awhile anyways.

Chiropractor dude.

He was in an accident dude.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: MattyNH on November 01, 2014, 07:40:31 PM
Ive been up and running since Oct 5th.. Basically what I've burned  is junk wood, short pieces  etc..if i was to guess maybe a half cord so far..oct was fairly warm here in NH
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: victor6deep on November 02, 2014, 04:03:10 AM
Haven't even started mine yet. Locked in my nat gas price awhile ago, so until it gets super cold no point in not using the natural gas. Also good to get some use out of the furnace as well to make sure alls well. My back is still too jacked to think about cutting anymore wood for awhile anyways.

Chiropractor dude.

He was in an accident dude.

Sorry for my comment i didn't know what happened, I figured just tossing wood around d was the cause. Sorry
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: Lineman on November 02, 2014, 04:23:05 AM
First year with owb MF 5000  being burning 3 weeks adding 3-4 pieces in morning & night  just wondering is it better to let it burn down or load it every other day  during mild temps here in MI
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: atvalaska on November 02, 2014, 06:42:59 PM
I've got maybe a 55 gal drum of wood burnt in 11 days......1200sf of shop...to 70/ in slab...calls for heat 2/3 times a day...9 hours apart or so
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: mlappin on November 03, 2014, 09:10:32 PM
Haven't even started mine yet. Locked in my nat gas price awhile ago, so until it gets super cold no point in not using the natural gas. Also good to get some use out of the furnace as well to make sure alls well. My back is still too jacked to think about cutting anymore wood for awhile anyways.

Chiropractor dude.

He was in an accident dude.

Sorry for my comment i didn't know what happened, I figured just tossing wood around d was the cause. Sorry

No harm, no foul.

Finally got the insurance crap straightened out, gonna let the good folks in South Bend that handle the Notre Dame football players take a crack at the back first, three bulging discs and a torn disc is a little more than a bone cruncher can handle I think.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: walkerdogman85 on November 04, 2014, 05:48:56 AM
I have been burning since October 2 here in central ohio heating my 1600 sf house. Burning a lot of cotton wood and poplar with a few odd pieces of oak and cherry. I hve burnt right at 3/4 of a cord. We have had mornings in the 20s with the temps warming up into the 60s.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: Hammersquash on November 07, 2014, 05:43:03 AM
  I have been heating my DHW, 140 year old 2200' Home and 48,000 cubic foot insulated shop now since the second week of September.  I have been dumping heat at times just to make sure I have a maximum time of 10-12 hours.  I have three 200' floor joist loops, exchanger in oil furnace plegnum and cast iron radiator in great room.  I have had rad shut off and the radiant floor heat is heating the entire house.  I think the fan in the furnace has only come on when it is 2'C or less.  We have had to keep windows upstairs open a crack to let the heat out.  Much of this heat is coming from the basement up the vents and returns.  The basement is a sauna as I have 3" sprayed insulation on the walls.
    My shop is kept at 21'C with a 100,000 BTU Dragons breath exchanger unit.  It was -2 at 6AM when I went outside and the shop was steady at 21 and the fan wasn't calling for heat. 
    The boiler is set at 170/180 and was 183 when I woke up this morning and just starting an idle cycle.  I have a wireless meat thermometer with 2 zones and the temp differential to return was 183/176 and have just shy of 200' of Logstor to the boiler.
  As far as wood consumption goes it is tough to gauge right now as I am burning wood from different stacks.  My best guess would be about 1.5 cords of mixed crap.  On milder days dry pine and very poor quality woods.  On the colder days I throw in a chunk of walnut or maple at night for longer burns.
  Very happy with the results.  I have pulled blower off the back of my unit and there is no creosote buildup or flap issues at this point that I have read about.
  Very happy!
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: Scratch on November 07, 2014, 07:44:26 AM
We've been pretty lucky here in Wisconsin so far...  I haven't burnt anything but scrap lumber so far.  Just this morning, I tossed in the last of the 2 pickup loads of scrap pine, that a cabinet maker dropped off during the summer.  I knew it would burn fast and like to use that kind of stuff for the fall and spring.

I guess I've also burnt up some random pieces of actual firewood that I never got around to splitting or cutting to stackable length, and also burnt up whatever was laying around during general cleanup around the wood shed, but haven't touched my dry stacked wood yet.

Snows-a-comin though so I know it won't be long till I have to dig into it.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: hoardac on November 09, 2014, 09:08:01 PM
I have almost all the ugly wood burn (shorts, cooked, branches) probably 1/3 of a cord maybe a little more. Heating 2500 sq feet kept at about 78-80.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: oaky on November 10, 2014, 06:33:54 AM
Heating 2500 sq feet kept at about 78-80.

I was beginning to think that I was the only person that like the temperature set in the upper 70's. :o
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: hoardac on November 10, 2014, 07:49:23 AM
Heating 2500 sq feet kept at about 78-80.

I was beginning to think that I was the only person that like the temperature set in the upper 70's. :o
When you walk in the house winter goes away, the floors are hot and you always go and put on shorts if your in for the day. That is why I love my wood boiler.
Title: Re: Cord gone
Post by: oaky on November 10, 2014, 08:20:28 AM
Heating 2500 sq feet kept at about 78-80.

I was beginning to think that I was the only person that like the temperature set in the upper 70's. :o
When you walk in the house winter goes away, the floors are hot and you always go and put on shorts if your in for the day. That is why I love my wood boiler.

 :thumbup: