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elcome to this, our second Complete Guide to Woodfuel, earlier than expected. The first edition was well received, but we were asked to bring it out in the autumn, when readers would be preparing for winter and keen to learn new ideas about heating with wood. Though last winter was warm, and demand for logs was lower than expected, the interest in woodfuel is still blossoming, particularly with regard to boiler installations for commercial properties, benefitting from the Renewable Heat Incentive. Its exciting to learn that the first community-owned energy supply company (ESCo) is on the verge of going live with its first contract, and indeed the boiler is on order. This edition we look at the use of boilers for centralising heat provision, we explore the dusty world of briquettes and pellets and we ask which trees should we be planting to meet future demand for logs, chips and other forms of biomass. Nick Gibbs, Editor-in-Chief
Updates on grants, events and initiatives How to make sure you are using the right wood for your appliance, and can distinguish one species from another, plus some simple handling and splitting and cutting advice for anyone aiming to produce their own logs
11 Buying a Stove
Our guide to buying a woodburning stove, looking at the difference between standard woodburners and boiler stoves, asking what size is best, and what are the different styles
14 Centralised Heating
Exploring the burgeoning world of the wood boiler, and particularly the log gasification boiler, and how it needs to be integrated into your wood supply. Theres a brief look at grants and other useful information
19 New Products
A device for unloading logs from a pick-up or trailer, a diminutive truck for moving cordwood and logs around the wood or the yard, Makitas new entry-level chainsaw and Oregons new cage for bulk cutting of firewood
Which species of trees should we be planting, and how can trees be processed efficiently to convert into firewood
A report on the making and using of briquettes and pellets in the home and commercially Lists of contacts for buying woodfuel appliances, forestry equipment and other sources of information
Editorial
NIck Gibbs, Editor-in-Chief nick.gibbs@freshwoodpublishing.com Contributors Sune Nightingale, Jude Walker, Jacky Leadbeater
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To stock Living Woods contact sales@freshwoodpublishing.com Printed by Buxton Press Freshwood Publishing 2012
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ales of solid-fuel Rayburn cookers rose by a quarter in 2011 with consumers watching rising fuel bills and caring more about the environment. People are keen to save on their fuel bills, says Rayburn brand manager, Nigel Morrison, but believes there is more to it than that. The most obvious reason for installing woodburning stoves and cookers is the shocking rise we have seen in fuel prices. We saw the big domestic energy suppliers introducing price hikes resulting in as much as 20% increases in energy bills last year. But there are other factors. Weve used many years of expertise to develop new solid-fuel cookers, as well as really innovative products like our range of smoke-exempt Aga woodburning stoves, which can be used in smoke control areas, and the Aga Fusion pellet stove, which fits beautifully in even the most contemporary interior. Rayburn emphasise that it is easier to link their range cooker to central heating with Eco-Connect (above), enabling the interconnection of different appliances, such as a wood-fired boiler stove and a gas boiler. Details Learn more about Rayburn at rayburn-web.co.uk.
The Lincolnshire Firewood Fair, which this year is being held on 2nd September at Ravesby Estate, has recently won the community section of the Lincolnshire Environmental Awards. The awards have been run for 25 years, and are organised by the Lindum Rotary Club and the Lincs Wildlife Trust. The judging panel was led by Professor David Bellamy. It is quite a novel twist for an environmental award to be won by a group encouraging people to cut down trees, said FC Woodland Officer, David White
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Surrey Hills
Annual conference reaches beyond local Home Counties
he annual Surrey Hills Wood Fuel Conference, now in its third year, is making a name for itself and attracting ever-more interesting speakers. Held on 5th October this year, at Birtley House, Bramley again, the conference features many authoritative voices. Their experiences may be largely local to the area, but will resonate with woodfuel suppliers and users around the country. Entitled Making Wood Work for You, the conference aims to pack 11 speakers into the session before lunch. In the afternoon there are workshops and demonstrations, and then a woodland walk and a chipping display that combines a delivery of wood chip to the Birtley House boiler. The event attracted 140 delegates in 2011, with the theme this year focusing on business opportunities in wood. The organisers say that it will be equally valuable for woodland owners, contractors, land agents, woodfuel
With 25 years experience in developing effective and efficient heating in one of the worlds coldest climates, Bosca stoves ensure your home is warm and welcoming all year round.
end users or suppliers, installers of stoves or boilers, or property developers. The Woodland Market Place is designed to put you in touch with others who can help you achieve your goals. Details Booking is essential, and a conference fee of 30 per delegate (including lunch and refreshments) will be charged on acceptance of your booking registration. To register visit surreyhillswoodfuel.co.uk/ conference.
www.woodfuelguide.com
For more information on Boscas extensive range of woodburning stoves visit our website or call us on 01392 474060
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Firewood
www.certainlywood.co.uk
www.ecoangus.co.uk 01934 862642
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Stacking firewood can be made into a family affair (left) with a bit of encouragement and competition. A covered store makes life much easier, especially if you need to separate species and wood of differing moisture content
20/08/2012 16:55
WooDworking
Aug/Sept.12 3.75 Issue No.31
BRITISH
ROBERT INGHAM
Offer the complete range of wood log boilers Two complete ranges Angus Super and Angus Orligno Output range 18kW, 25kW, 40kW, 60kW, 80kW, 100kW, 130kW Grants available under Renewable Heat Incentive
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July/August12
3.75
Managing a Woodland
Are we planting too many trees? Investing in fuel Using an auger & harvesting lime bast
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Gothic-Style Fumed Oak Bed Apple Trays to Sell this Autumn Mower-Friendly Garden Bench
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Steve Tomlin compares traditional tools returning for the 21st Century
18/07/2012 20:29
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ts hardly surprising that gas, oil and electricity have proved so popular. Burning wood is a chore, unless you have a wood chip or pellet boiler (or stove). Woodland owner Stuart Galey in Gloucestershire reckons he uses about 5-6 tonnes of logs a year, just to fuel one large woodburning stove, which heats his home. He air dries the wood for two years before burning. Even if you have the wood delivered, theres still stacking to do, then moving it into the house, storing it ready to burn and then dealing with the ash afterwards. Dont expect it to be easy, but it can be good value, should be doing woodlands good, it is renewable, and it means you arent using up irreplaceable fossil fuels. And youll be taking more exercise! A basket is the traditional store for wood inside. It lets the logs breathe, and looks good. But it is perhaps surprising that so many are round, which is an inefficient shape for storage in most situations. Buying a rectangular or square basket makes more sense, but they can be difficult to source. One solution is to make one yourself. Last year Jenny Crisp ran a course to make a Log Basket, using a hoop and scalloms, at a cost of 160. There are no details of similar courses this year, but you can approach her by email at basket@jennycrisp.co.uk.
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At the other end of the burning cycle, dealing with ash can be less tiring, but a much dustier challenge. It is difficult getting the ash out of a stove and into a bucket without filling the room with billowing clouds of dust. One solution is to use a lidded metal biscuit tin to scoop out the ash, with the lid preventing too much of the dust escaping. Another is to make a receiving bin into which the dust tray from the stove slips. As a prototype we did this in plywood, and it works really well, but youd need to make them from metal if the ash is hot. The tray slips into the slot, and the ash drops into the bin. It is increasingly difficult to find suppliers of galvanised metal buckets with lids. You cant use a plastic bucket for fear of it melting should the waste still be hot. You can buy metal ones easily enough, but few of them have lids, which means that the ash gets wet and difficult to manage outside the back door before being added to the compost heap.
A moisture meter (above) helps you monitor the dryness of your firewood. We made a prototype ash collector in plywood, but it needs to be metal (above left)
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Firewood
Moisture
Identifying species
How to tell ash from pine
Ash (right) is easy to identify. Notice the straight grain and the angular shapes, and the scaly bark. The blue stain in the ends is typical, though not always present. Pine or fir is likely to have more knots, a silkier surface and often a resinous smell. It will be lighter in weight
Living Woods tested three moisture meters in July/ August 2009 (LW05:60). If you dont want to spend much, and want just a rough indication, then the Westfalia Wetekom EM4806 from westfalia.net is great value for about 10. You can buy similar ones from Maplin, to get you going. If you want to get more serious about monitoring the moisture in your firewood, then Euroheats AC101 is fantastic, costing about 46inc.VAT (euroheat. co.uk). It has a neat method for testing battery levels and calibration, and an automatic cut-off when you put the cover over the pins. Perhaps the most accurate (and cheapest) way to measure moisture content is the oven dry test. You put a weighed sample (WS) of your firewood into a warm (but not hot, no more than 103C), and keep weighing it till the weight stays constant (WOD). To calculate the moisture content (MC) as a percentage takes a simple formula: MC=((WS-WOD)/ WOD)x100. Wet firewood may have an MC of up to 60%, and you shouldnt burn it till it is below 20%. A set of fine scales help (below), from eBay.
Laurie Buckingham with his amazing Woodstation, for bulk cross-cutting logs (above) using a chainsaw. For smaller quantities, the Log-Loc (below) makes cross-cutting safer and faster
Log store
The same is true of a stack of split logs, however it is a good idea to have a permanent roof on such a store because you will be accessing it all the time to bring logs into the house and it soon becomes a pain having to remove a protective sheet from the top of the pile. Inevitably the pile will diminish unevenly and the cover will fall off. Though it might suit your way of living to have one store, many users of firewood will have divisions or compartments so that softwoods and hardwoods can be separated, as can wet and dry wood or for different lengths for different stoves. Drew Langsner, of The Country Workshops in the USA, admitted recently that after years of cutting their logs to differing lengths to suit two stoves, they now cut them all to suit the smaller fire because it has proved more efficient that way.
dentifying the species of wood dumped on your drive by your local firewooder can be a challenge. It is, however, important to learn what you are buying. The more you know, the less likely a supplier is to fob you off with wet wood or wood that doesnt burn so well. By knowing what you have you can also choose to burn the softer woods to get a fire going and the harder species to keep the stove alight for longer. Its all about density. In theory, all species burn at about the same rate by weight, although we all know that 1kg of ash will burn more quickly than 1kg of horse chestnut. Actually, horse chestnut, which was traditionally never rated well for burning on an open fire (because it is very slow burning) performs well in a stove, with higher temperatures and greater control of airflow. Its still a terror to split, though. To generate enough kW of heat to warm a room or house, you need a specific quantity of dry wood. You will need a larger quantity of softwood than hardwood because the latter species are generally more dense, though there are notable exceptions. Ash, apple and hornbeam are considered the best firewood as they season easily and burn evenly and well. Oak and beech tend to be slower to dry, but will give you a long burn. Sycamore dries relatively quickly, but also burns quite fast. Willow may spit in an open grate, but is good for getting a stove going if you can keep it dry during seasoning so that it doesnt rot. The list goes on. So how do you tell one from another. Its a challenge, especially when the wood is split and you dont have a finished surface to study. You look at the ends of the log. You look at the way its split. You look at the grain pattern and colour, and you search for any medullary rays (flecks) in the grain. You study the bark, and maybe even smell the wood and the dust, if there is any. Experienced woodsmen are likely to be able to distinguish one wood from another blindfold, just picking up a dry piece and judging it by its weight and size and shape. Here are some identifying clues.
The Logmatic (above) is ideal if you dont like using an axe or maul for splitting. An inner rod slides inside an outer sleeve to create a hammer action for less stressful splitting. It is best held vertical
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To view the full range please visit our website or call us on 01392 474057
The Complete Guide to Woodfuel 2012 00
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Stove Design
heat. This is a radiator with no valve or thermostatically regulated valve (TRV) on it so that water can always flow. You run wide-bore pipes to it which always rise so that heat can get to it by thermosyphoning which is the tendency of the hot, less dense water to rise and the colder, more dense water to fall. Often you would use a towel rail as your heat leak radiator as this is a place where you will usually always want some heat. If, for example, your stove is going and you suddenly have a power cut then the heat from your stove can dissipate through the heat leak radiator and the whole system doesnt start to boil. Some boiler stoves are thermostatically controlled which means that the air vents start to close if the stove starts getting too hot. Others comprise a load unit which gets the water up before opening the flow, so that the stove is hot enough to work efficiently. This also means that the hot water allowed out into your heating and hot water system is at 60C or over. When you are heating your water tank that means that you have usable hot water very quickly.
Establishing the right size of boiler stove to suit both the room and your heating needs can be a challenge. Smaller stoves, and those with clip-in boilers, can be used to supplement an existing gas or oil system and to reduce bills and fossil fuel needs. But if you want to fuel all your central heating with a boiler stove you are going to need a larger unit, which might be too big for your room. Boiler stoves over a certain size will produce too much hot
Stovaxs Riva Vision Stove (top) and the iPhone app for studying their brochure
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WOOD MULTI-FUEL GAS ELECTRIC BOILER STOVES To view the full range please visit our website or call 01392 474060
A free-standing, single door stove from Arada, set into a fireplace (left) and the Riva Studio 2 inset fireplace from Stovax (above)
10 The Complete Guide to Woodfuel 2012 www.woodfuelguide.com www.woodfuelguide.com The Complete Guide to Woodfuel 2012 11
Stove Design
Linking
Linking in a boiler stove to your heating and hot water system can actually be pretty simple, writes Sune Nightingale of Stoves Online. At its most basic you plumb the boiler stove in as if it were a radiator and add in some non-return valves to stop hot water from your conventional boiler being pumped through the stove when it is not lit. An improvement to this is to plumb the hot water pipe from the stove into the cold return pipe to your conventional boiler. The heat from the stove now enters the system at the same place as the heat from the conventional boiler which means that you do not affect how your radiators are balanced. If you want to add in, say, a second boiler stove then I would advise using something called a centraliser. It is essentially a compact, insulated metal box with multiple pipe connections. It forms a central point to which you connect all your heat sources like your conventional boiler and your boiler stove(s). They then heat the water in the centraliser which then in turn is used to provide hot water and heating. On top of the centraliser are two thermostats that measure the water temperature inside. When you light your boiler stove it heats the water in the centraliser but it is not until the water in the centraliser reaches, say, 50C that any heat is allowed to leave. This means that if you have a centraliser then you do not need to add in a load unit. At this point you start to move heat from the centraliser into your hot water tank. This gives you what is called priority to hot water. When the centraliser reaches, say, 60C, water is then allowed out to your central heating system to heat the building. The centraliser itself doesnt care where the heat comes from so you can have various boiler stoves and/or your conventional boiler coming on to heat it at any one time.
Small stoves, like Salamanders Hobbit (above), produce a surprising amount of heat. More contemporary styles include an inset stove from Stoves Online (right) and designer stoves by Sense 3D (below right)
water, at too high a temperature, for a standard hot water tank or leak radiator to cope. They will need a dedicated system, but that may mean you have to have the stove on all the time to maintain your hot water supply. Alternatively you will have to look at a more complicated combination of heat sources, which will up the price.
Woodburning stoves are one of the few items thats best bought smaller than you need. At least it certainly isnt wise to buy one too large. Wood burns best when its very hot, rather than smouldering, and a cavernous fire chamber will need a lot of logs to get up a full head of steam. That said, some of the newest stoves are so efficient and have such clever airflow that they can burn a single piece of wood at a time. Its all about airflow, says Matt Beckenham of Stovax, who produce their own Yeoman, Gazco and Kensal stoves in Exeter, and also distributors for the Rocal, Dovre and Wamsler ranges from mainland Europe. You need to look for high efficiencies, of 75% or above, and those that are clean burning. There are many stoves on the market that are also suitable for use in Defra smoke-controlled areas, so woodburning need not be the preserve of rural dwelling. Matt says that there is growing demand for boiler stoves allowing complete home heating from a stove. There are a few formulas offered to estimate the size of stove you need for a room. According to whichstove.com and Stovaxs advice on choosing a stove (stovax.com) you divide the volume of the room (in metres) by 14 to find the kW output you need to buy.
A load unit (right) gets your boiler stove up to temperature fast and then keeps it there. A centraliser (see boxout, left) does a similar job and can be used to replace a load unit
Styles of stove
Stoves can either be free standing or built in to a fireplace or chimney breast. Arada produce four ranges of stoves, all produced in Axminster, Devon. They have Stratford boiler stoves, starting at 5kW for their EcoBoiler 7, and going up to 16kW for the EcoBoiler 20, with the measure relating to output to water rather than to the room. There has never
been a better way to use natural renewable energy in your home, says Aradas Jo Holmes. Their Villager and Hamlet ranges are traditional, with the Arrow stoves their premium, contemporary brand. Some traditional stoves have double doors, though demand for single doors is growing with more dynamic styles and because users want to see an unrestricted view of the flames. The favourite Villager stove has double doors, says Jo, but sales are pretty much equal between singles and doubles.
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Case study:
Log Gasification Boilers
Bore Place
Heating
Centralised Heating
While pellets and chips suit institutions, log gasification boilers are proving to be popular for anyone who has access to their own firewood and extra buildings to heat
Dunster Heat install Vigas log gasification boilers (above). A log boiler and accumulator tank installed by Eco-Angus (above right). Fitting companies are now offering packages to house as well as install the boiler, with integral storage for firewood
ome readers may well own a woodland and have a supply of wood large enough to centrally-heat a home. Log gasification boilers come in outputs from around 16kW up to around 120kW. They can be a convenient way to provide your heating and hot water. Essentially a log gasification boiler is a very efficient boiler that you install in an outbuilding. Typically there is a fuel chamber at the top and then a gasification chamber below with the hot flue gases running through a tube type boiler to extract as much heat as possible. The wood heats up in the top chamber and the released gases are conveyed to the lower chamber via a vent or slot. As the gases pass through this slot a fan blows in a supply of air which allows those gases to burn fully. Open up the lower door when
In a bid ofto find an alternative to fossilmanagement fuels, Commomwork has chosen heating. You would typically be loading and and thought. The first year is the lighting the boiler twice a day in the depths of winter difficult, Mark to explains. Often theyve beenfacilities of the Biomass as the renewable source of most energy heat the and perhaps once every two or three days in the lowering the thermostat on radiators to match the Wood chip height of summer. The other advantage is that you rising price of oil, but 99% of our customers like Education utilising produced there own land. can useCentre, longer logs which makes for less work wood chip burning wood and dont like from burning oil. They will The Bioenergy Fully Automatic wood chip boiler has the following features for minimum operation and maintenance:
Room for wood
Living Woods recently reported on the founding of the countrys first wood-based community ESCo (Energy Supply Company), Woolhope Woodheat. An ESCo will install a boiler (normally burning woodchip, but potentially pellets or even logs), accumulator and piping for free, paying the client a nominal rent for housing it. This is what Woolhope are aiming to do at Canon Frome Court (above) as soon as theyve raised the seed funding. The client pays for the metered energy, guaranteeing the ESCo a minimum demand per year, the cost of which is likely to be less than oil or gas. The ESCo claims the RHI for the installation and running costs for up to 20 years, but is responsible for running and maintaining the boiler, so the onus is on the ESCo to provide quality fuel at the lowest cost possible, ideally from local woodlands. It is a neat system, communities encouraging local woodlands to be managed and provide fuel.
The history of the manor house goes back to medieval times; a Tudor building was later incorporated into a Jacobean mansion, parts of which remain, with seventeenth and twentieth century additions. Together with the ancient walled garden it is listed Grade II. usually have huge fire chambers so you can really you divide the kW of the boiler by two to find the It has bedrooms (sleeping up to 23 persons), 4 meeting and a large get a lot of wood in there and it 12 is important to make tonnes of wood youll need in a rooms, year. The 20 tonnes kitchen dining space. sure that this is the case if you do and choose this type youll have to store to fuel a 40kW boiler takes some
The Renewable Heat Incentive (RHI) is a grant scheme which will support the installation of renewable heat sources. Eligible biomass boilers must be on the Microgeneration Certification Scheme Bioenergy Technology (MCS) list and are either pellet boilers, log have recently installed gasification boilers, or woodchip boilers. a wood-fired boiler Boiler stoves are not eligible. Unlike the package at Bore Place FIT (Feed In Tariff), which is funded by (left and above) in adding a bit to all our utility bills, RHI is Sussex. The organic woodchip farm centrally Commonwork is a group of organisations based on at Bore Place and funded. It has been delayed and boiler they have then delayed again, and then finally split study centre, working towards sustainable solutions in farming, the environment and installed has auto feed, into two phases. auto start, auto clean Phase 1 only applies to commercial education. The organic conversion of the farm was completed between 1996-2001. and auto de-ash, inside installations and started early in 2012. 335 hectares are farmed in total, including 147 rented from neighbouring farms to one of Bioenergys Biomass heating systems receive a increase self reliance in terms of feed stuff and to allow stock numbers boiler houses and to be kept payment per kWh up to a certain cut-off wood store up to around 260 cows.
cutting and chopping. The big accumulator then supplies all your heating and hot water but, because of the huge size of the tanks with these systems, you might have another smaller solar-enabled hot water tank in the house which is then heated by the larger tank. Equally the accumulator tank can be linked into an existing oil or gas system.
Space for logs is the main thing. The The challenge, says Mark Weatherlake of Dunster Heat (who distribute and install Vigas boilers and Auto Feed boiler is the easy bit. You have to focus on Akvatherm accumulator tanks) is not so much installing the boiler, but organising your wood supply managing the woodfuel effectively Auto Start to make feeding the chamber easy. Typically, his
the boiler is in full swing and you will see a very intense jet of flame being roared into the lower chamber. Typically the efficiency of log gasification boilers is around 90%. You connect the boiler to a large accumulator tank which lets you run the log gasification boiler flat out and store up all that heat for later. These boilers
want to heat a single detached home, and often a Auto Clean farmhouse, or install a larger boiler for a number of properties to claim the Renewable Heat Incentive Auto De-ash grants that are only currently available to Dry wood businesses. A four-bedroom, well-insulated house Obviously the wood has to be well dried before it Auto Adjusting with Lambda control may only need a 25kW boiler, while a leaky five can be burnt, down to at least 20%. But boilers can bed might need a 40kW model. As a rule of thumb burn pretty much any species, hardwood or 92% Efficiency customers have their own wood supply and either
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often say that theyve got their house back. Most of Marks customers have a free or cheap source of firewood, probably their own. Space for logs is the main thing, he says, adding that owners come up with ingenious methods of storage. The boiler is the easy bit. I focus on managing their woodfuel. One customer built a cage from building site or crowd control fencing, 6ft high, with the front lower and a tarp over the top, and dumped the firewood straight in from a processor. Others fill potato boxes (or make their own 6x4ft slatted chests) and stack them with the front loader on a tractor. Hiring a contractor with a firewood processor, for perhaps 300 a day, is an effective way of getting a years supply of wood cut and split in no time. The smaller boilers take 0.5m lengths of wood and larger ones 1m logs, so you can process a large quantity very quickly.
Nationwide suppliers of
DRAGON HEAT
30 YEARS OF BIOMASS EXPERIENCE
Effective solutions to heating costs Payback in less than 2 years Burn timber, packaging, straw, pallets etc No need to chip or pellet your fuel Fantastic savings against oil, LPG etc Can be installed alongside your existing boiler Can be used for Farmhouses, Glasshouses, Workshops, Factories, Grain driers, stables, tack rooms Worldwide experience Tried and tested design
Dragon Heat have been producing biomass boilers (above and left) for more than 30 years. They can be used to burn straw, timber, packaging and even broken pallets, with no need to chip, pack or process any of it
Accumulator tanks can be used for boiler woodburning stoves in the house as well as log gasification boilers outside. Wood is best burnt fast and hard, but if you do that then you can end up with an overheated house when your stove is going, and a freezing house when it is not. Step into the breach the heat accumulator tank or heat store. An accumulator tank is a big, heavily insulated water tank and forms the heart of your heating and hot water system, all provided through the one tank. All your heat sources are connected directly to the accumulator tank. Just as for boilers, with boiler stoves an accumulator tank lets you dump all the heat from your stove into the tank for use as and when it is needed. On a cold day with a correctly-sized system you should expect to be able to burn your boiler stove for around four hours of an evening to heat your house and at the same time heat up the whole tank. Come the morning the tank is still hot and your heating can automatically switch on, using the water in the accumulator to heat the radiators, and you will have hot water even though the stove is not lit.
softwood, and are very easy to get going with firelighters or a blowtorch, and some can be lit automatically once theyve been stacked. The size of the accumulator tank has to match the boiler. A 25kW boiler needs a 1500 litre tank, and a 40kW boiler calls for a 2500 litre tank. The water comes out of the boiler very hot, at about 85C, and stays in the tank until you need to use it to heat radiators or your hot water tank. It is so hot that a valve, called a Thermamatic K, is fitted into the system to blend the steaming hot water from the accumulator with cooler water returning from the house. Though Mark has installed a few boilers within homes, the majority are in outbuildings, and installers are now offering special sheds and shelters for boilers, tanks and wood as part of the package. Hot water is distributed in insulated pipes, which add about 25-30 per metre to the price.
District heating
A district heating scheme is where two or more buildings are powered by the same heating system. They are common in Scandinavia and are starting to catch on here, indeed since the introduction of the RHI, Mark Weatherlake says that commercial 60kW, 80kW and 100kW have become his most popular products. You have a large boiler and associated accumulator tank to provide the heat, and the hot
water is then pumped round a heating main. This is usually the heavily-insulated underground pipe, running past each house or building. Heat is then taken from the heating main by each house as needed, potentially with the energy metered at each point. The advantage is that you only have to install the one big log gasification boiler, pellet boiler or woodchip boiler to run it all. Often you would also include a backup oil or gas boiler just in case the main one breaks or you run out of fuel. Woodchip systems are typically much larger and require a large, dedicated boiler house and fuel store. For big systems, woodchip is probably the cheapest in terms of fuel costs if you are buying in, but the initial outlay can be considerable. A woodchip boiler, whilst more automated, is usually dealt with in much the same way as a log gasification boiler. Pellet boilers provide a much more compact solution, with the pellets either blown into a hopper from a truck/trailer, or tipped in from bags. Such a boiler can even be located inside a house, office or workshop, but pellets are more expensive, especially if you are able to produce your own logs or chips. However, they are also the most automated, and hence suit particular situations. For instance, Stephen Owen installed a pellet boiler when he built the woodland classroom at Cranleigh School recently. Its a case of horses for courses.
n Log burning central heating and hot water systems n Green, clean and efficient n Grants available n Economical to run n Easy to install and operate
Higher Court, Treborough, Taunton, Somerset TA23 0QW T: 01984 640656 W: www.dunsterheat.co.uk E: info@dunsterheat.co.uk
Contact
Dragon Heat Ltd Loves Lane, Sutterton, Boston, Lincs. PE20 2EU 01205 461594 07811 147803 05601 142863
Plantoil
The Windy Smithy creates a selection of individually hand crafted products, ranging from our original design of Woodburning Stoves, Handmade Edge Tools and Decorative Ironwork, to our unique Towavardo Travellers Wagons.
Forest Fuels have been operation Landowner Partnerships for nearly two years with woodland owners to help them benefit from demand for woodfuel without the risks and commitment. They have hubs around the country and link suppliers of woodfuel (left) with users (above)
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2-STROKE OIL
New Products
News of products that will make firewooding easier
Makita EA3201
New blue chainsaw good for firewood
Loadhandler
Visit www.jocemetal.co.uk to see videos and for prices and more details
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www.carboncompost.co.uk
20/08/2012 23:38
The advantages of our retort over a ring kiln are: * Short burn time - typically 4 hours from lighting to shut down. * Fully transportable - trailer mounted option. * Can pyrolise any type of wood - logs to twigs. * Cleaner in operation - up to 75% fewer pollutants released. * More efficient - 100% of wood is pyrolised. No ash or waste. * Temperature Readout - Integrated digital thermometer. * Large retort chamber - 1.8 cubic metres. * Easy access - retort & firebox doors at both ends. * Easy to operate - no special skills required
The retort was carefully designed & computer modelled to ensure that it burned off harmful particles & emissions by ducting the hot gases around & back into the retort. This has resulted in zero visible emissions once the retort enters the pyrolysis stage. When the subject wood is first heated, it enters the endothermic stage. This is where external energy (combustion in fire box) is required to start the process. During this stage, steam is given off. As the temperature rises, wood gases becomes mixed with the steam. This dirty stage only lasts approx. 30 minutes. When the temperature reaches 375C, the steam has reduced & the gases, when diverted into the firebox, ignite. This is referred to as the exothermic or retorting stage, where the ignited gas jets are sufficient to complete the process of pyrolysation with no additional external energy. By using a combination of adjusting the gaps of the firebox doors & the chimney butterfly valve, the temperature is kept below 500C during the retorting stage.
Email: admin@carboncompost.co.uk Telephone Geoff on 01392-274699 or Robin on 01392-431454 Registered in the UK - Company Number: 7260592
ou dont necessarily need a big chainsaw for firewooding, as long as you arent having to convert large, mature trees, particularly hard species like oak, beech and ash. If you want to keep your costs low, and perhaps only have a woodburner to feed, then Makitas new EA3201S will do the job very nicely. Weve used a fair number of Makitas cordless and mains chainsaws, and have generally been impressed. This is our first go with a petrol version, and its a neat little saw. The controls are very simple and well positioned, and the brake is easy to knock on and pull back. The tool-less chain adjustment works well, and saves a lot of hassle with a wrench. Considering EA3201S might be bought by first-time firewooders, the instructions are good, and relatively comprehensive, but it is disappointing not to find a chain file in the box, and it is quite difficult to work out from the instructions which file you need to use. The sharpening advice is otherwise excellent, and hopefully new users will take the saw into a local dealer for some advice and the appropriate sharpening kit. The saw did pretty well cutting a stack of firewood in Oregons firewood cage, using the full length of the 35cm bar. It only
Efficient firewooding is all about reducing the handling. Throwing logs into a trailer or pick-up is generally easy, especially when theyre conveyed there on a belt from a processor. But unpacking is a real pain, which is solved by the Loadhandler. Available in two sizes, to suit your vehicle, this has a strong mat that unwinds and winds across the bed to pull the load out and onto the ground. Depending on whether you stack or dump, you should be able to reverse the trailer up to the store, and either stack from the tailgate at a convenient height, or eject the wood into a pile (organised or otherwise). The Loadhandler fits to the tail of your pick-up or trailer with brackets and straps, semi-permanently. You could remove it in a couple of minutes, but it should be able to stay put for a fair amount of time. No screws or bolts are needed, so you dont have to compromise your tailgate. The 42in wide LH2200M model we tried costs 110+VAT, can take a load of 1000kg, and will certainly save you considerable time and hassle. It is available from Galbraith Bros (loadhandler.co.uk, 01732 763637).
began to stall when the logs collapsed, and it was running a bit hot. For 200 its nice and light and easy to handle, and would be a great saw for firewooding and for chucking into the Landie for light work. Details Makita EA3201S: 35cm bar; 32cc 2-stroke petrol engine; 1hp; 0.3 litres tank; 4.1kg; 0.2 litres oil tank; max chain speed 18.9m/s; sprocket pitch 3/8in/0.050in; 4mm file to sharpen; c200inc.VAT; makitauk.com.
The Complete Guide to Woodfuel 2012 19
www.woodfuelguide.com
www.woodfuelguide.com
New Products
Oregon Firewood Cage
Micro Truc
andling wood is continual problem whether its for health & safety reasons, difficulty with access, care for the land or just fatigue. The compact, low ground impact Micro Arb Truc has been developed for anyone working with loads of wood. With its many attachments it has been honed and tuned to resolve access issues, ground impact, operator fatigue and cost of moving materials, says Keith Douglas, and whether you are a tree surgeon, forester, firewooder, national park/estate ranger or woodland owner we have the solutions to most problems. The Micro Arb Truc is a 4x4 wheeled, low ground impact, narrow access micro mover, just 28in (0.7m) wide, powered by a Honda GXV160 engine running on standard unleaded petrol. It comes as standard with a skip which can carry 365kg (8cuft), approximately three normal wheelbarrow loads, and the tyres are filled with OKO slime to reduce puncturing. The Micro Arb Truc base unit is ideal for loading and shifting small lengths of timber, logs, rings, stump grindings, chippings etc... To further enhance the volume the extension sides can easily fit to the skip increasing this volume to 11cuft. The range of attachments now includes the trough with back plate, armchair, trailer (hitched or hand pull), power lifter, extension sides, tow ball hitch, loading ramp, dual front wheels, A snow plough, grit/salt/fertiliser spreader, sprayer and flat bed have been developed for other purposes. The Micro Arb Truc can be upgraded to have its own 12v DC supply to power other attachments if required. Keith Douglas says that it takes seconds to fit the trough instead of the skip, and it also has removable and
Moving logs in the woodlands or at the yard just got a little easier
NEW
Easy start. Pull force required to start the machine is drastically reduced with Spring-assisted recoil starter. Intelligent ignition coil. Controls stable idling. Increases output power. Engine overrun protection. Accumulated electric energy charge for easier re-start.
32cc Chainsaw: EA3201S35B Engine: 2-Stroke, Bar Length: 350mm, Chain Pitch: 3/8, Chain Gauge: 0.050, Fuel Tank: 0.3L, Weight: 4.1kg.
Oregon have launched a lightweight, folding version of the logging cage, made from tubular and pressed steel. Most woodland equipment is built sturdily, to cope with heavy materials. The advantage of Oregons device (referred to as just the 542653), is that it can be picked up and moved easily. You lift it by the central support to fold the sides together, so that it can be transported more easily. It is light enough to be carried by almost anyone on their own. This is likely to be a significant advantage to woodland owners who might want to process cordwood into logs either in their wood or at home. It also means that after a session of cutting you can pick the Oregon up for better access to the logs that have fallen to the ground beneath the supports. The panels front and back are marked for popular log lengths. This helps, but users will probably work out their own system, cutting the cordwood to a consistent length so that there arent too many odd bits overhanging at the ends. Using it speeds up firewooding immeasurably because the wood is stacked (to a maximum load of 160kg), which also means the logs dont spin. Sometimes cut logs will compress and jam the chain. When that happens you have to be careful not to push down hard as there isnt much clearance between the V-shaped supports and the pressed steel panels, and you could hit the metal with your bar. Quick braking is essential, and it might be an idea to fit a wooden strip along the top edge of the panels to protect your chain. You also have to get used to not being able to see the bar all the time, as you cut down through the stack. The saving in time and effort using this is significant. You could build a permanent version from wood (with no threat to your chain), but it would be more difficult to move around. For about 87+VAT it is pretty good value, and appears to be well made.
reversible bolster arms for stabilising the load. The bolster arms also come with hooks for holding a builders bag with the four looped handles, perhaps for chips in a confined space. It can be used for handling timbers of 1m and 2m horizontally, and longer logs can be stacked on an angle. You can also attach a trailer, similar to the trough but on wheels. It can be supplied with either a drawbar for connecting to the Micro Arb Truc for handling longer lengths of timber and brash or you can have it with a hand pull bar, this can also have a free running pneumatic castor wheel to make manual use much easier as a rolling load. The tow ball hitch is fitted to the front of the skip and is ideal for moving a chipper in narrow access areas or even for skidding trees, and the two-piece loading ramp can be used for loading the Truc or a load into open-back vehicles, trailers or skips. The armchair is fitted with a hand winch and is designed for handing a builders bag of logs. A power lifter is powered from its own battery pack and comes with either a baseplate or small forks, to allows the operator to lift from ground level large, heavy trunks. The extension sides offer increased bulk/volume, and the dual front wheels can be added for stability and traction.
BCC Charity Detailswww.makitauk.com For contact the Micro Arb Truc Company on 0845 3731 832 or visitmicroarbtruc.co.uk.
A light touch on the switch stops the engine and the switch returns automatically to the start position, eliminating flooding.
Environment-friendly engine. Catalytic muffler that complies with all current regulations.
Petrol chainsaws with vibration dampening. The Makita two-mass system known as M2M is an effective system for dampening engine vibrations. Helping to keep your hand steady.
New Products
www.woodfuelguide.com
AVT MM4
HW132
BBX7600
EH7500S
Woodland Management
woodland in the right conditions. Hornbeam is one of the finest of burning woods, but theres not much call for the timber and it is relatively slow-growing. Sweet chestnut is in high demand for fencing and building, being Britains most durable hardwood, and wild cherry is excellent for both fuel and furniture making. Birch grows well, and is a native pioneer species, but it is far from durable, and needs to be processed quickly and kept under cover for firewood or it will rot. And theres very little market for its timber, as is the case for poplar and willow, though they will grow well in wet sites and can be burnt in a stove. These fast-growing species may become more popular with time for larger boiler installations, or for chipping for biomass. Alder is also fast growing, and reputedly only good for clogmaking, but it will help you establish a woodland and anecdotally the logs are good for burning. Dont discount softwoods. Woodburning technology is changing, and many of the traditional maxims relating to species choice for fires were founded before woodburning stoves were as common as they are today. Horse chestnut, often pilloried for providing nothing but conkers, is actually an ideal species for a stove because it burns slowly and cleanly. Unfortunately its twisted form makes splitting hard and a large proportion of specimens are succumbing to pests and disease. Planting a conifer like western red cedar amongst oak or ash can help to nurse the broadleaves by drawing them up to the light, and then be used as fuel logs or chips when they are thinned. Any that are left to mature can eventually be harvested for shingles and lightweight cladding. In Scandanavia they burn almost only softwoods, and as long as the wood is dry enough and the chimney is lined there shouldnt be a problem. In fact mixing softwood logs with hardwood can be a valuable way of balancing fast and slow burns.
Harvesting
wide range of purposes. It provides habitat for many rare or endangered species The advantage of traditional coppice species is that you cut them back to the ground (or pollard them at about 6ft), and wait for them to regrow with multiple stems and harvest in up to 20 years, rather than having to wait for them to reach maturity. The disadvantage (or advantage, depending on how you look at these things) is that coppicing is labourintensive, though of course that might change if new types of harvesting equipment are developed.
Choosing species
One approach to firewood, practised at Harebushes Wood near Cirencester, is to let local people forage for logs once a year for a weekend
PHOTO: CERTAINLY WOOD
You can at least look to species that are certainly good for burning, and have other purposes. Ash is probably the most versatile of all woods. Oak burns well, but is slow to grow, and is arguably too high in value to be planted specifically for the fire. Hazel thrives beneath ash and oak, and is superb for burning and wildlife, but there is relatively little demand for the timber, beyond the rustic woodcraft sector and for charcoal making. Sycamore and lime will coppice and grow well, but the market for their timber is very limited. There is a little bit more demand for beech, for floors and work surfaces, and for furniture in Scandanavia and Germany, but there are concerns that it wont cope well with climate change. It also has a habit of shading out almost all other species, and can dominate a
Managing woodlands
When it comes to planting new woods, the Forestry Commission and Woodland Trust can help with plans and grants, and you might find funding through local authorities and other conservation groups. If you have an established woodland you
Living Woods contributor recently met up with Steve Cave (LW21:33), who had decided to set himself up as a firewood supplier, part time. He bought a Japa firewood processor from Fuelwood (above), and had some training from them. Then he had bags printed with his logo and details. You can buy nets from the likes of Medallion and Bag Supplies (see Directory). He then traded in his BMW and bought a pick-up to deliver loads of logs, buying in the wood from merchants for conversion in his yard. Steve wants to achieve 10,000 of sales a year. Its a nice secondary business, he says, and if you dont mind repetitive physical work its fun. Log burner sales are booming, but the sales window is short.
At the most basic level, a splitting maul (above) will make firewooding much simpler than an felling axe, which has a shallower bevel and is more likely to get stuck in the rings you are trying to split
NO TRACTOR? NO PROBLEM!
Posch Home range
electric 5.5 tonne log splitter and electric sawbench
A recent development for serious woodfuel production has been the introduction of Lasco cone splitters by JAS Wilson, who were launching them at the Arb Show in June. The idea is that a spinning, threaded cone, a bit like the tip of The Mole in Thunderbirds, pulls itself into large logs so that they can be split for processing. Small versions of the Lasco cone can be fitted to tractors, JCBs or to a trailer or forwarder. The tip of the cone can even be removed as it is the only part that wears. If that wasnt enough, Unseld Technik in Germany have developed a baling press for wood chips. The Biomass Press can produce 30-50 bales an hour, looking like round hay or straw bales. These can be left out in the open to dry for six months, ready for collection. At the other extreme, few British woodlanders will have come across the Timberline Sharpener (below). Living Woods heard about this a few months ago, and have now had a go (see September/October issue). This is an extraordinary piece of kit that holds a carbide sharpening burr at the appropriate angle, and guarantees that each tooth will be sharpened to exactly the same length.
may be able to apply for a Woodland Improvement Grant (WIG) for woodfuel production. This will be conditional on the writing of a management plan, for which you may also be able access a grant. A WIG can be used to buy processing equipment, to improve access or to thin the trees.
Processing wood
Firewood processors come in many forms, with the largest effectively small factories, producing cut, split and bagged logs almost automatically. If you choose to buy a processor, combining the two key operations of crosscutting and splitting, the first decision you have to make is whether to go for a machine with a circular saw or a chainsaw bar. The circular saw is more expensive to maintain (because it is difficult to sharpen yourself), and when you switch the machine off, the blade continues spinning for longer than a chain. The plus point is it has a narrower cut and therefore you do not waste as much of the log, and there is less sawdust. You also have to consider that circular saw blades will normally have tungsten carbide teeth (TCT), which cope far better with abrasive materials than chainsaws. A circular saw may need professional sharpening, but it will stay sharp longer, and wont need the regular adjustment of a chainsaw bar. The blade on a circular saw processor is likely to take up more room than the equivalent bar model. There are many other features to consider. Some processors will have two-speed splitters, so that easy to split logs can be worked quickly, while tougher stuff might need more torque. The Hakki Pilke 2X is so named because it has a dual ram system to speed up operations because you dont have to wait for the first ram to return to its ready position before the next log can be cut. You can buy a model with automatic or manual splitting, with the efficiency of a machine being measured in cubic metres per hour, at anything from 2-20m3/hr. Processors can be powered by 3-phase electricity, diesel or petrol motors, or by a PTO on a tractor. You can buy mobile models that are road legal, at either 25mph or 50mph, to suit operators who need to move just round the corner or a fair way, though most owners seem to prefer to set up
At the top end of the scale, Fuelwood have processors that are self-contained firewood factories (above). Big processors can split logs many ways (right)
01556 612233
in a yard, permanently. Some machines will have a grapple or crane to load the processor, while smaller models like Just Saws Badger have a winch to insert logs. The length of the bed determines the length of log you can use in the processor, while the length of outfeed elevator is critical if you want to feed split logs into a large trailer or a store. The elevator on the Norwegian Dalen 2054 can swing 20 either way, which gives you yet more flexibility for the positioning of a trailer or boxes or bags. Many elevators are about 3.5m long, with options for a 4.5m conveyor if you need greater length. An interesting new development, but very much for the big boys are cone-shaped splitters designed to break up huge lengths to make processing easier. JAS Wilson have these from Lasco, and they can be mounted on the arm of a forwarder, tractor, trailer or JCB.
Tim Fogden
Meadow Farm, Coney Weston Road, Sapiston, Bury St.Edmunds, Suffolk IP31 1RX Tel/Fax 01359 268923 Email log_loc@btinternet.com Web: www.log-loc.co.uk
Conta
Unit 1 & 2 Lark Unit 1 & 2 Lark Hall Farm, Cavenham, Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk IP28 Hall 6DDFarm, Ca TEL: 01638-750955. FAX: 0 TEL: 01638-750955. FAX: 01638-751052 FREEPHONE: 0800 783 4018 EMAIL: Bsmith4uk@aol. EMAIL: Bsmith4uk@aol.com WEBSITE: www.medallionnet.co.uk
MEDAL
Simpler solutions
Of course most woodland owners wont need a full processor to harvest firewood for their own use, though youd be surprised how much you need for a years fuel. There are mechanised solutions, like a dedicated Posch crosscut circular saw for cutting logs to length, or hydraulic splitters for reducing the size of rings. These can be powered by petrol, a tractor PTO or by electricity, depending on whether you are working out in the woods or back at the yard. They are vertical, horizontal or interchangeable. The smaller ones tend to be horizontal, sitting low on the ground, and you pay more for vertical splitters, which are much easier to use, requiring less bending. Some of them are supplied with wheels for easier transport. Use our Directory at the back to contact suppliers and find out more.
www.woodfuelguide.com
medallion1/8.cgw.indd 1
-CONTRACT COPPICE HARVESTING 08/12/2011 14t 360 with a Bracke C16a Fella Buncher Head for effectively harvesting coppice for biomass
13:3
info@southernwoodenergy.co.uk
www.woodfuelguide.com
www.southernwoodenergy.co.uk
The Complete Guide to Woodfuel 2012 25
Recycled Woodfuel
making briquettes. Fercell, who now boast 950 Weima applications in the UK, also sell carousels for bagging the briquettes so that they can be stockpiled during the summer.
Heat retention
Local pellets
Pellets need a delicate balance of wood types and moisture content, says Andrew Wilkinson of Duffield Wood Pellets, a local producer/supplier near Ripon, Yorks. Originally a sawmill, the company started producing pellets to use up their own waste, but now most of the timber they sell is bought in, and so is the wood to make pellets. They can use relatively low-grade wood, but it must be neither too wet nor too dry, and ideally there is a mix of hardwood and softwood. It is sourced locally. For more details visit duffieldwoodpellets.com.
Making briquettes
The briquettes are produced in a machine that will cost a joiner or furniture maker from about 10k, made by companies like Rojek (axminster.co.uk) and Weima (fercell.com). You fill a hopper with dust and shavings, which need to be dry (less than 18%), and a screw drives them from the bottom of the hopper into a chamber, where they are compressed with the pneumatic ram. They then pop out of a tube, straight into a carousel of bags. The compression is remarkable, making storage far less space-hungry, and the briquettes can be used to generate heat in your own workshop or sold on garage forecourts, or straight from the factory door if you have the time. Bruce le Gros from Fercell says that briquette machines are being bought by joinery factories and by farmers with small sawmills or with wood businesses on site. He says that many of them will get a woodburning stove one year to use up the offcuts, then purchase a briquetter then next, and finally buy a shredder to produce the chips need for making briquettes. When the briquettes can be used to fuel a boiler a business can apply for the Renewable Heat Incentive grant. Chipboard and MDF dont briquette well, but as a barrel magnet can be used to remove any metal from the shred wood, discarded pallets do often get used for
Woodburning stoves are notoriously difficult to hold overnight. You can stock them to the hilt, clamp them right down and hope the core heat will survive. Its very inefficient and leads to build-up of soot in your stove and in the flue. Or you can give a small stack of fuel a very fine draught of air, and hope it doesnt burn out. Its hard to find a solution, especially with logs so inconsistent in shape, density and moisture content, and some retailers will say thats its not worth trying, and you should start afresh each morning. Briquettes, in contrast, are consistent in shape and density (in theory), and are dry. It is much easier to keep them glowing, with far less exhaust. In theory briquettes should be made by a local joinery firm thats making doors and windows and lots of waste. They dont know what to do with their dust and chippings, indeed they may have to pay for it to go to landfill. Thats the case with Cuff & Sons in Sherborne, Dorset. We can sell all that we make in the winter, says David Cuff, but summer sales and storage are a slight problem. We are trying to find outlets who can buy now at a discount and store till winter. Interest is growing every year. When we did some research into briquettes a couple of years ago, the only garage to stock them in our market town was Tesco, where we found
round briquettes from CPL, stocked amongst the kindling and logs. Cyril Austins, our local country store, which is known as a coal supplier and sells woodburning stoves and woodfuel kit sold us two imported types, but once again youd have to know about briquettes to ask. Our local Countrywide store normally stocks Blaze Away heat logs, but hadnt started stocking them in mid-October. To find out more about briquettes and heat logs we rang up Corinium Stoves, possibly the best known specialist woodburning stove supplier in Cirencester. They didnt stock briquettes, didnt know of a supplier, and didnt even recommend them as an alternative to logs. Fifteen miles away, in Wroughton near Swindon, Alison Davidson of Ridgeway Stoves was far more helpful. Customers buying stoves have very rarely heard of briquettes or heat logs, but roughly 80% return for more once theyve tried them. She likes to promote them because the results are much better than wet logs, and so new users of woodburners dont end up blaming Ridgeways stoves. The wood in briquettes and heat logs is dry, and theres far less chance of smoking up the glass in a stoves door. Youre also more likely to be able to keep the stove warm overnight. Thats not to say they replace normal solid wood, but are mixed in for specific purposes. Weve been approached by a number of woodworkers wanting to make a low cost briquette machine so they can use their own dust, and indeed one reader was making crude briquettes with a car jack and a length of tubing.
The woodland classroom at Cranleigh School in Hampshire has a pellet boiler with a hopper because it makes heating the studio so simple
arvest Wood Fuels (HWF) are based in Farnham, Hampshire. They produce about 1500 tonnes of hardwood pellets themselves a year, using an Italian T-Systems hydraulic press, which forces sawdust from sawmills and chips through a grid of holes, like a mincing machine. The pressure heats up the wood particles to such a temperature that the lignum in the wood liquifies, and then hardens without any additives to glaze the pellets and hold them together. There is more lignum in softwoods than hardwoods, hence hardwood pellets tend to be crumblier. Harvest also supply softwood pellets from Verdo Renewables at Andover, who can produce nearer 55,000 tonnes a year and have a bagging facility. A pallet of 96 10kg Verdo pellets from HWF will cost you about 260, including 47 for delivery and 5% VAT, and weighs a little less than 1 tonne. James Little of HWF explains that 1kg of pellets equates, roughly, to 5kw/hr of heat. So 15kw boiler will use about 3kg/hr at full tilt. One bag will last roughly 3.3hr, so theres an obvious advantage in convenience by having the pellets delivered in bulk. Harvest Wood Fuels charge 2.20 per mile for delivery by lorry, to have the pellets blown into the hopper, so the cost effectiveness is limited to a local area. As a result, HWF is looking to open smallscale plants across SE England, perhaps next in Kent, to supply customers within a 20-mile radius. Currently, 80% of the pellets they supply go to big boilers (larger than 50kw), using as much as 300 tonnes a year, but 80% of their customers use 3-10 tonnes per year, with half receiving bags and half
bulk deliveries by lorry. They are looking to introduce re-usable bags, with a deposit and returns policy. The Renewable Heat Incentive is already having an impact on HWFs business. Our customer base has increased by 30% this year, James Little explains, adding that the warm winter has meant that this boost has served to keep sales level. The market for pellets, he says, is very competitive in the UK, with pellet prices 20% lower than on the Continent, and though prices are being kept artificially low and are likely to rise a bit, it will not match oil and gas.
Woodfuel Guide
Useful Contacts
Information
Here are some private and public contacts. West Mids Heartwoods heartwoods.org.uk NE England Northwoods northwoods.org.uk East England Woodfuel East woodfueleast.org.uk SE England SE Wood Fuels sewf.co.uk Surrey Hills Wood Fuel surreyhills.org.uk South Yorks Forest Partnership syforest.co.uk Woodlands for Sale firewood.co.uk National Biomass Suppliers Database biomassenergycentre.org.uk Renewable Heat Incentive ofgem.gov.uk/rhi Woodheat Solutions woodheatsolutions.eu Scotland forestry.gov.uk/woodfuelscotland FC England Regions NE NW Yorks & Humber E.Mids W.Mids East SE SW 01669 621591 01524 565800 01904 382300 01623 821474 01905 532200 01842 815544 01420 23337 01626 890666
Directory
Use our growing directory of woodfuel contacts if you need to buy kit or want more information
Stoves
This list covers most brands of stoves and boiler stoves; whichstoves. co.uk has some more.
A boiler from Farm 2000 (left) and woodburning stove from Charnwood (right)
hunterstoves.co.uk
Villager
villager.co.uk
Wamsler
wamsler.co.uk
Aarrow
windysmithy.co.uk yeoman-stoves.co.uk
firesandstoves.com
KP Stoves Morso
of wood-fired boilers, but are sure thats not the case. Heres a list of suppliers and manufacturers. Do please email us if you know of others for the next guide.
Workshop Stoves
Though you can use almost any woodburner in a workshop, here are some that are either small, or designed for waste.
Firewood Processors
Here are the main brands of firewood processing machinery, with locations for a demo.
future use, because they keep the logs tidy but allow air to circulate for better drying, though a covered wood store is just as good for seasoning, if not better.
Broseley Fires
broseleyfires.com
Cookers
Woodburning cookers are mostly log-fired, but there are some pellet-fuelled.
ashwellengineering.com
Splitters
Many of the companies that sell firewood processors also sell splitters and crosscut saws.
Bag Supplies
Charnwood Clearview
LC Packaging
charnwood.com clearviewstoves.com
Bioenergy Technology
bioenergy.org
Esse
esse.com
Byworth Boilers
byworth.co.uk
Greenheart
Medallion Nets
dunsleyheat.co.uk
agarangemaster.com windysmithy.co.uk
Dragon Heat
stovesonline.co.uk
dragonheat.co.uk
salamanderstoves.com
Dunster Heat
Euroheat
dunsterheat.co.uk
woodwastetechnology. co.uk
euroheat.co.uk
oxdaleproducts.co.uk
Information about the Woodfuel Woodland Improvement Grant (Woodfuel WIG) is available from forestry.gov.uk/ewgs-wigwoodfuel. Applications for the Farm and Forestry Improvement Scheme (FFIS) should be made through your regional authority (like Woodfuel East) or to the Forestry Commission. Information on the FFIS can be found at defra.gov.uk/ publications/2011/11/10/pb13678-ffis-guidance/.
workshopstoves.co.uk
evergreenstoves.co.uk
Stovemason
Eco-Angus
stovemason.com
ecoangus.co.uk
Stoves Online
arada.uk.com
Charcoal Retorts
Exeter Retort
carboncompost.co.uk
stovesonline.co.uk
fairenergy.org.uk farm2000.co.uk
universalbingham.com
Wamsler
Pressvess Retort
pressvess.co.uk
Ryetec
ryetec.co.uk
wamsler.co.uk
Biochar Kiln 1
Talbotts
carbongold.com
talbotts.co.uk
Coppice Stove
Heta
woodstoves.co.uk
Windhager UK
windhageruk.com
blackmountainwoodfuels. co.uk
caledonian forestryservices.co.uk
Southern Wood Energy blowing chips (far left), a stove from Axminster (left) and GBTs mobile splitter
The Badger processor from Just Saws (left), Pressvesss charcoal retort (above) and a Rayburn woodburning cooker (right)
Mermaid Inn
A pub in Norfolk, encouraged to convert to woodfuel by the local council and Woodfuel East, has been so impressed by burning wood that they now sell briquettes to local customers. The 15th Century Mermaid Inn in Elsing was one of 15 properties to share a 50,000 Norfolk County Council grant fund to install a wood-fired boiler. We decided that a woodfuel heating system could meet our aims of saving money, substantially reducing our carbon footprint, while maintaining a traditional ambience and using local resources. The boiler fits in really well into the traditional surroundings and our customers have commented on how the pub feels warm and welcoming. The move proved so successful that the Mermaid started selling 10kg sacks of briquettes, produced in Norfolk. Referred to as Fire Logs, the briquettes cost 4.75 a sack, or 3.75 if you buy more than 20, which also qualifies you to free delivery within 15 miles of Elsing. Collections are during opening hours only, but as the landlords suggest: Grab a bag and grab a pint.
Robert Lodge never considered when he installed a stove that within five years hed be supplying logs
resource. A third of the 300,000 tonnes of timber produced in Yorkshire a year comes from Forestry Commission woodlands. Austria is still far more advanced than we are, added Robert, and have lots of biomass boilers, but we are moving in their direction as oil prices keep on going up. Rudie Humphrey of the FC said: Roberts experience shows the two sides of the story. Woodfuel is an opportunity to create profitable rural businesses and employment, but we need more raw materials coming out of local woods. We also had woodland owners on the trip to Austria, and the message is getting through.
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