Sweet gum

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Egghead

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Jan 18, 2013
71
Williamson, GA
I rented a log splitter this weekend to split up a bunch of oak. A few months ago I had a lot of sweet gum dropped. Is sweet gum ok to burn? Figured if it was I might as well split it while I have the chance.
 
I haven't burned any, but from what I've read it's only mediocre in terms of BTU value, and quite difficult to split. If you're going to use it, get it split while you have the hydraulics.
 
It burns good but burns up quick little better than pine. By all means use the splitter! It is tuff to split. I burned a lot 30 yrs. ago when I was young and strong and didn't know better.
 
It burns ok and fries very quick. But definitely use the splitter, it is NOT a fun wood to split by hand
 
I burned a cord or better of it last year. It burns ok, but sure stinks like hell. You'll definitely want to use a splitter as it shreds more than splits. It kind of has a fluffy ash and does leave more ash than the oak and maple I've been burning this year.

The big thing is to keep it covered if at all possible. It will season fairly fast, but it will rot pretty quick too.
 
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Use a 35 ton splitter if you can. The splits look like an accordion with a light splitter.!!!
 
Not a whole lot better split wise. I think Elm burns better when dry although I try and not burn either.
If that's what you have fine, it all burns when seasoned, some is just more work to get it to the stove:)
 
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I burn it. It will be fully seasoned in less then a year, very easy to light, and good for quick heat. I had no trouble at all splitting it with an x27.
 
X27 must work miracles cause it is hard as heck to split with wedge and sledge or a regular maul. Especially big 20 in rounds.
 
X27 must work miracles cause it is hard as heck to split with wedge and sledge or a regular maul. Especially big 20 in rounds.

Can't split it into halves/quarters like most wood, got to go around and whittle splits off the outside edge. The bigger ones were 28-30" diameter and cut to 18" lengths.
 
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Yup, just put another load of it in the stove. :)

We've been burning gum for years. It's plentiful here, grows like weeds. The Amish neighbor burns it in his shop stove.

Sweetgum is a bear to split. It tears and mangles more than it splits. Since you're gonna have a hydro splitter on hand, work up the gum while you've got it. Gum splits more easily when the rounds have been left to set a few months.

The stuff burns well but leaves a lot of ash. Btu is on par with tulip poplar, I'd say. It needs at least a year on the stacks to cure. Gum has a high resin content so make sure it's bone-dry before burning it.
 
all I can say about sweet gum is "dey ain't nutten sweet bout sweet gum!
 
don't waste your time with gum unless its all you have - no heat and leaves a ton of ash - junk wood
 
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don't waste your time with gum unless its all you have - no heat and leaves a ton of ash - junk wood

Yep, when you consider the time and work that goes into processing it, gum is poor firewood. Side by side, one split may burn well, the next may not. It's unpredictable. In this area it won't sell. Not even mixed with better hardwoods. No one wants it.

We burn it because it's plentiful here and we have a splitter that can handle it. When taking gum, it's the first tree to be bucked and the last to be split. It's OK for days when the temps ain't real cold.
 
Burned two dry splits yesterday to see how it would burn. Did okay - not sure how much heat they produced. Did turn to coals and ash. If you have it I guess it will do in a pinch as last option before wet wood.
 
I rented a log splitter this weekend to split up a bunch of oak. A few months ago I had a lot of sweet gum dropped. Is sweet gum ok to burn? Figured if it was I might as well split it while I have the chance.

I have processed and used about 20 different woods, and so Sweet gum is my least favorite wood. It is hard to split, leaves a ton of ash, and only has medium BTUs. The one good things are that it lights pretty fast, and it can keep a fire going a long time because even though it doesn't burn very long, it leaves so much ash that the coals that are left are in a very well insulated ash blanket. But I never seek it out--too many better wood choices to use.
 
I have processed and used about 20 different woods, and so Sweet gum is my least favorite wood. It is hard to split, leaves a ton of ash, and only has medium BTUs. The one good things are that it lights pretty fast, and it can keep a fire going a long time because even though it doesn't burn very long, it leaves so much ash that the coals that are left are in a very well insulated ash blanket. But I never seek it out--too many better wood choices to use.
I wound up splitting some of it but not all. It was really putting a strain on the splitter and I didn't want to risk having to pay for any repairs so I quit while I was ahead. I'm planning in mixing it in with my oak so hopefully I won't see a huge difference when burning.
 
The only time I ever split sweet gum we blew a seal out on the ram on the splitter. The grain looks like someone took a hair crimping iron to it. Going around the outside and peeling off of the round definitely worked the best.
 
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