Hi!
I am new to the forums and to wood burning generally. My family recently moved to Vermont and our house has a Hearthstone Mansfield stove in the living room (which was definitely part of the appeal!).
Being new to serious firewood use, I have a bit of a dumb question that I can't seem to find directly answered anywhere. I have done quite a bit of reading on the forums here as well as other places around the internet about seasoning firewood. The consensus is clearly that 20% or below is ideal in terms of moisture content for firewood.
Our house came with about a cord of wood; I have no real information about the wood beyond that (how long it has been seasoning, type of wood, etc.). I have purchased a moisture meter and have split and checked the middle of a variety of the pieces in the stack; I consistently get moisture reading between 20 and 22.5% depending on the specific piece being tested.
My question is: given that moisture meters are far from 100% accurate, how seriously should I take the 20% level as a "hard" line above which I shouldn't be burning my wood? Is something at 22% "close enough" and thus fine to burn this winter, or is that asking for trouble? I don't yet feel particularly confident with some of the other methods like the noise two pieces make when banged together.
For context, I have three young children and safety is my primary concern. The last thing I want to do is burn a bunch of wood that isn't ready and end up with a chimney fire on my hands from creosote buildup.
I am new to the forums and to wood burning generally. My family recently moved to Vermont and our house has a Hearthstone Mansfield stove in the living room (which was definitely part of the appeal!).
Being new to serious firewood use, I have a bit of a dumb question that I can't seem to find directly answered anywhere. I have done quite a bit of reading on the forums here as well as other places around the internet about seasoning firewood. The consensus is clearly that 20% or below is ideal in terms of moisture content for firewood.
Our house came with about a cord of wood; I have no real information about the wood beyond that (how long it has been seasoning, type of wood, etc.). I have purchased a moisture meter and have split and checked the middle of a variety of the pieces in the stack; I consistently get moisture reading between 20 and 22.5% depending on the specific piece being tested.
My question is: given that moisture meters are far from 100% accurate, how seriously should I take the 20% level as a "hard" line above which I shouldn't be burning my wood? Is something at 22% "close enough" and thus fine to burn this winter, or is that asking for trouble? I don't yet feel particularly confident with some of the other methods like the noise two pieces make when banged together.
For context, I have three young children and safety is my primary concern. The last thing I want to do is burn a bunch of wood that isn't ready and end up with a chimney fire on my hands from creosote buildup.