Moisture content in fire wood

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Brandon3r

New Member
Jul 20, 2014
16
Indiana
So I went to Lowes today and bought a moisture meter and checked my wood that's been cut and split since late winter early spring and it tested in the mid to high teens. It has been raining here almost every day for more than a week so I'm sure that hasn't helped me any, what does everyone look for in moisture content in their wood?
 
Mid to high teens;) some here will say lower but you should be just fine providing you are reading on the fresh face of resplit pieces.
 
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Under 20% is usually good to go.
 
Never tested mine . After 3-5 years drying in racks it is ready. But I am 5 years ahead. Building 2 more 4x5x16 foot racks this fall.
 
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Some here will say there is no need for a moisture meter and that is true if you have the space to dry your stacks for 2 to 3 years. For the rest of us who don't have an acreage they are a valuable tool and a fun toy. My opinion which is mine alone is that its best to be 10 to 20%. Any more and my stove seems to be kinda sluggish. If you can get a wood species calibration chart for your meter that would be helpful. A recent thread here enlightened me to the fact that the readings im seeing on my lodgepole pine might not be accurate and I may have to use some adjustments. Ive sent two emails to the company that produced my meter asking them to produce a calibration chart and haven't heard back.
 
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Some here will say there is no need for a moisture meter and that is true if you have the space to dry your stacks for 2 to 3 years. For the rest of us who don't have an acreage they are a valuable tool and a fun toy. My opinion which is mine alone is that its best to be 10 to 20%. Any more and my stove seems to be kinda sluggish. If you can get a wood species calibration chart for your meter that would be helpful. A recent thread here enlightened me to the fact that the readings im seeing on my lodgepole pine might not be accurate and I may have to use some adjustments. Ive sent two emails to the company that produced my meter asking them to produce a calibration chart and haven't heard back.
I'm curious Sean, what adjustments you feel you need to make? Is your lodgepole not burning well for you?
Even if the moisture content reading of lodgepole do need to be adjusted slightly higher for an accurate approximation of it's "true" MC, I've still found that anything under 20% on my moisture meter still burns adequately enough, and since 99.9% of my lodgepole reads in the low teens, and it's only the odd round from the base of the tree that ever reads close to 20%, and even that stuff seems to burn fine, I've never really worried too much about the theoretical need to adjust my reading for lodgepole.
I still stand by the rule that anything under 20% is good to go. And as you are likely aware, usually the very base of the trees contain the highest MC, so if the base of the tree is 20% or less, then for sure the rest of the tree is well under that.
Still, sometimes when I'm splitting my lodgepole I encounter rounds that seem heavier than the others and I get a little paranoid so I'll stop and grab my moisture meter and take a reading on a fresh split. I'm always pleasantly surprised to see that it reads in the low teens like the rest of it. :cool:
 
I'm curious Sean, what adjustments you feel you need to make? Is your lodgepole not burning well for you?
its just that I'm curious what the mc of the wood is. It bugs me to think that when I'm reading 18% on my meter that it could actually be 23% Either way I'm good with it but I tend to split hairs when it comes to my hobbies! I haven't checked it since split but all my stacks whether its lodgepole, larch or fir was reading under 21% and lots of it was quite a bit lower when it was split in May-September. The lodgepole has been burning quite well. I love the tree, it burns hot and clean so no problem there. I had some Larch that was reading around 23% that I tried burning a couple of years ago and found compared to my splits that were less mc it just didn't burn well. I'm surprised that its been suggested that wood is ok to burn above 20% but i guess results can vary with different kinds of stoves and wood.[/quote]
 
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I wonder why my post and reply to lumber jack above came through as a quote? Happy thanksgiving Hearth members!
 
Mangled the quote opening tag when you trimmed the replied to quote.
 
I find 8-16% works best for me. The dryer it is, the less air it needs to burn. Last 2 weeks, I've been burning wood that is at about 5-8%. Burns clean clean clean, and hot hot hot. The outgassing is beautiful, and I can burn with the air control just about all the way closed. Stove top temperature hovers in the 450-650* range for 5-6 hours.
 
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I find 8-16% works best for me. The dryer it is, the less air it needs to burn. Last 2 weeks, I've been burning wood that is at about 5-8%. Burns clean clean clean, and hot hot hot. The outgassing is beautiful, and I can burn with the air control just about all the way closed. Stove top temperature hovers in the 450-650* range for 5-6 hours.

Just curious - where/how do you get wood that is 5% moisture content?
 
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I have only enough room for 1 year. so I burn anything under 22%. Mostly ash and silver maple but a little cherry mixed in.

I also burn a lot of building scrap. Which is pine lumber and its at 12-15% so I would love to see 5%
 
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Not on planet Earth you haven't.

So I checked that batch again, and my meter was not on the correct mode setting. Correct setting was showing 8-13% when I rechecked this morning.

This is wood that has been inside for over 2 years. We try keep the RH at 45-55% in the home year round.
 

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So I checked that batch again, and my meter was not on the correct mode setting. Correct setting was showing 8-13% when I rechecked this morning.

This is wood that has been inside for over 2 years. We try keep the RH at 45-55% in the home year round.
Cory, I'm sure that wood is great to burn, but you aren't getting a good reading like that. The best way to get an accurate reading is to split a piece of firewood and stick the prongs in the center of the fresh split. Not on the end. image.jpg
 
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Cory, I'm sure that wood is great to burn, but you aren't getting a good reading like that. The best way to get an accurate reading is to split a piece of firewood and stick the prongs in the center of the fresh split. Not on the end. View attachment 141144

I do that with my newer wood. When I split the old stuff and check it, it comes out within 1% of the splits I check on the ends :) This wood is 100% acclimated throughout. Also, if I get the prongs in deep enough, I do not get any variance in % even on fresh splits. (Maybe 1% again)..
 
Never tested mine . After 3-5 years drying in racks it is ready. But I am 5 years ahead. Building 2 more 4x5x16 foot racks this fall.

Pics or it didn't happen!


:)
 
On my old non-cat EPA stove anything under 20% was good, lower was better. On the old smoke dragon that belonged to my grandpa out in my shop, anything under 20% is good, lower is better.

I have my first ever catalytic stove this season, we had it installed in May. The book on it says 13% MC per electronic gizmo, maximum. Last year's models from the same manufacturer, the books for those all said 16% per electronic gizmo, max. My cat stove seems to run good on 16%, but lower is once again better. For the last two weeks or so we have been seeing mid +30s dF for a few hours at midday, pretty much below freezing 22 hours a day for a couple weeks. Over night lows get to the single digits about half the time. Seems like the colder it gets the more I like my combustor equipped stove.
 
I did. I calibrated it using the weigh/bake/weigh/bake/weigh method. Surprisingly accurate for a cheap chinese thing.

I know you're kidding, but spontaneous combustion requires the fuel to undergo pyrolysis first, the exception being oil soaked cotton, especially linseed oil, or some of the other 'drying' oils.

I got accidentally interested in spontaneous combustion when I was studying polymer chemistry.

My firewood does light very nicely though.
 
It's not rocket science. Just open a fresh split, stick the pins in the fresh face and aim for around 20%. Most meters are plenty accurate for firewood and anything less the maybe 25% at the higher end is fine. 20% is what most EPA stoves are designed around.
 
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I did. I calibrated it using the weigh/bake/weigh/bake/weigh method. Surprisingly accurate for a cheap chinese thing.

I know you're kidding, but spontaneous combustion requires the fuel to undergo pyrolysis first, the exception being oil soaked cotton, especially linseed oil, or some of the other 'drying' oils.

I got accidentally interested in spontaneous combustion when I was studying polymer chemistry.

My firewood does light very nicely though.
Solar guy yes joking, but if your wood is below 20% moisture you are in good shape to burn. We get combustion in our hay and silage when it is not dried enough before storing , it is strange chemistry but oh well!!
 
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