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Burning wood in the house
On Oct 27, 10:49*am, Jonathan wrote:
On 26 Oct, 17:43, Judith in France wrote: On Oct 25, 10:26*pm, beccabunga beccabunga. wrote: geordief;867856 Wrote: Can anyone tell me if when wood will spark and when it won't? I mean I (think I ) know that burning resiny wood causes sparks. And I also know that damp wood will cause sparks. But what about bone-dry resiny wood(ie pine etc).Could that be safe? My first impression *is that sparking is greatly reduced but I am still wary. Any one have * first hand experience here? thanks Any wood from pines or firs will/can spark, whether wet or dry. The other one to watch for is willow, which is particularly explosive, especially when burnt wet. -- beccabunga We have a woodburner and, on order, a wood burning Aga type cooker. We burn mostly oak, seasoned at least 2 years, it burns well and no sparks. *We also burn frene and some pine as we have a lot of pine beams over 150 years old from the barn. *We had the roof replaced as it was infested with Capricorne. *This pine doesn't spark but I doubt there is any resin left in it after all this time. Judith I'm burning 19 Century roofing lathes at the moment as kindling and they spark amazingly. (It's in a wood burner.) Jonathan We have a lot of old wood like this, it too goes into the woodburner although it doesn't seem to spark, much. I remember when we had some work done on a house about 33 years ago, that the lathes sparked, maybe some treatment in the wood? Judith |
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