I'm curious to know if anyone is storing pellets outside in vrac in either
a DIY or commercial Bin.
I'm looking at this option for next year....
Regards.
a DIY or commercial Bin.
I'm looking at this option for next year....
Regards.
Me too. My plan is to purpose build a building 8'x16'x 8' high. In the center of the roof I will put a 16" cupola (1 inch for every foot of ridge) This will be removed to fill building.I'm looking at this option for next year....
The way I figure it 8x8x11 will be my "hopper" 13 ton cap. These dimensions are material friendly The remaining 4+ feet will be for working around the pellets. Since I plan to have a flat bottom...there will be plenty of "working " pellets. (pulling pellets toward auger) Also that space will prove useful if I just have a few bags to store/feed into the hopper8x16 will give you plenty of room for sure....
I think it's a great idea, would love to buy pellets in bulk. I can come up with the bin/silo/hopper/building or what ever one wants to call it. However, me thinks in Southern Ma. bulk delivery is an issue.I'm curious to know if anyone is storing pellets outside in vrac in either
a DIY or commercial Bin.
I'm looking at this option for next year....
Regards.
build very tight and keep it closed when pellets are colder then moist airWhat about moisture and condensation issues?
New England Wood is supposed to have some sort of bulk delivery system in place but I don't know how far out. It seems they work with sub contractors for more remote area, not that Jaffrey NH isn't remote to begin with. At their site it says up to 10 ton deliveries but no indication as to where to. It says to call for info. Larger loads to 14 tons are done by way of contractor distribution anyway.In my case Bulk is still not available but my plan was that once a year I would fill my bin
with a vacuum system..........
All of this to say that the underlined question when I posted this one was to ear
about people doing it and if there is moisture/condensation problem???
Some people said no in the past and some that 'guessed' it would.
Rain would not get in there for sure....
I'm curious to know if anyone is storing pellets outside in vrac in either
a DIY or commercial Bin.
I'm looking at this option for next year....
Regards.
DO NOT build a silo half inside and half outside unless the outside section is VERY insulated to keep the inside temperatures consistant. Condensation WILL happen and make a massive clog. This is not a guess or assumption.The way I figure it 8x8x11 will be my "hopper" 13 ton cap. These dimensions are material friendly The remaining 4+ feet will be for working around the pellets. Since I plan to have a flat bottom...there will be plenty of "working " pellets. (pulling pellets toward auger) Also that space will prove useful if I just have a few bags to store/feed into the hopper
I must ask.....If it is an only outside silo, than possibility of condensation is reduced????DO NOT build a silo half inside and half outside unless the outside section is VERY insulated to keep the inside temperatures consistant. Condensation WILL happen and make a massive clog. This is not a guess or assumption.
If the bottom of the silo is flat then what encourages pellets near the wall to eventually go down into the stove
If you plan on making this room air/moisture tight, then you will be working in a confined space and remember CO2 is heavier then air. I hope you have a plan of pushing in fresh air to breath.Me... I plan to have a small hopper shaped funnel that I'll have to shovel the last 1/3 of the pellets into.. I figure 1/3 will just flow...1/3 I will have to pull with a concrete come-a-long and the final 1/3 ..with a grain shovel
To build it to work un assisted... close to 1/2 of the volume of the bin will be lost to the angles..
Besides I'll be feeding my basement hopper...not the stove
are you saying my inside hopper will have vacuum in it when it is filling?Instead of an auger, a simple 6 hp shop vac could be used to move the pellets through 2" pvc pipe to a solids separator above the inside hopper. If my description is lacking, just picture a cyclone separator on a wood shop dust collection system. When the pellet level gets too low in the shed then connect a flex hose to the PVC pipe in there and vacuum them into the inside.
Your Madame Defarge must equal my "She Who Must Be Obeyed".Mr dream . . . but Madame Defarge would never allow it. "Too unsightly".
Something like this.....no, your inside hopper would not have vacuum. There would be a separator (maybe a barrel) that is part of the vacuum system above the hopper. Two pipes into the top of the barrel, one pipe from your shed the other pipe goes to the vac. The bottom of the barrel has an opening with a gate. Close the gate when the vac is on to fill the barrel. The pellets are sucked through the pvc pipe from the shed into the top of the barrel where their weight causes them to drop into the barrel rather than being sucked all the way into the vac. use a drywall dust bag in the vac and it takes care of any dust issues as well. turn off the vac and open the gate to fill the hopper.
Your Madame Defarge must equal my "She Who Must Be Obeyed".
I was thinking of just that...but how often is relative humidity lower then moisture content in the pellets??? I'm thinking...not oftenYou are planning for ventilation from the cupola but that is only an outlet....don't forget some other vents around the base to allow air into the building for circulation.
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