at my work, they pay guys to take away their extra wood that nobody will take.
My boss burns some at his house in winter (not very much)
All of the wood we make pallets with is some kind of hardwood, looks to be some kind of Oak... White Oak I think, I'll grab some pictures tomorrow.
It's all rough cut lumber, and Kiln dried. (then it sits around in our warehouse for a many months before we get to using it)
I do recall reading that you're not supposed to use mill-ends in stoves, when I looked around for what specifically a mill end was, it said it was any dimension lumber.
Rough cut lumber, is dimensional lumber.
Is this stuff usable in BK stoves? Or any stove in general?
I see guys burn pallet wood here commonly (thanks to searching), but couldn't find too much about using it in modern cat stoves.
Probably over 30k lbs is scrapped over the course of a spring and summer, and I'd like to get my hands on that... since it's free :]
at least 15-20 4x4x4 crates full of it we scrap.
It's all 1x6 and 2x4s, a usually some 4x4s as well.
Any issues?
My boss burns some at his house in winter (not very much)
All of the wood we make pallets with is some kind of hardwood, looks to be some kind of Oak... White Oak I think, I'll grab some pictures tomorrow.
It's all rough cut lumber, and Kiln dried. (then it sits around in our warehouse for a many months before we get to using it)
I do recall reading that you're not supposed to use mill-ends in stoves, when I looked around for what specifically a mill end was, it said it was any dimension lumber.
Rough cut lumber, is dimensional lumber.
Is this stuff usable in BK stoves? Or any stove in general?
I see guys burn pallet wood here commonly (thanks to searching), but couldn't find too much about using it in modern cat stoves.
Probably over 30k lbs is scrapped over the course of a spring and summer, and I'd like to get my hands on that... since it's free :]
at least 15-20 4x4x4 crates full of it we scrap.
It's all 1x6 and 2x4s, a usually some 4x4s as well.
Any issues?