I've threatened to post this for a while on various posts so I thought I'd do this while the turkey is cooking
I can process about 12 pallets per hour by myself and more with some help. I have a small stove and heat 2 rooms that are very "tight" (insulated, vapor barriers, etc) and easy to heat. During shoulder season I mostly use pallets parts to take the chill off. During the winter I use pallets parts on top of kindling to get some nice hot coals in the stove then throw my "real wood" on there.
First here's my trusty stand I built for cutting the slats off. Yes I built it from pallet parts
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I then either use a small chainsaw or a sawz all/reciprocating saw and cut the slats off. Sawz All is best I think because inevitably I'll hit a nail and that blade takes the abuse better than my chainsaw. Still with a good sharp blade even with the red oak pallets I sometimes get its pretty much like cutting butter.
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So the pallet pieces wind up in a pile and I usually make kindling out of them with a small hatchet.
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Other thing I have done with the slats is to take four or five of them and hit them with the nail gun and make small "logs" out of them. Pretty fast work with a nail gun. These saved my butt my first year burning when I realized the "seasoned" wood I bought was wet. Two of these on the fire and then a green piece of wood got me thru the winter. Not really planning to make any of them this year as I scrounged lots of wood this year.
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Then I take the runners and cut them up with a table saw. I find this much faster than the Sawz All or a chainsaw. I sharpen my own blades so no biggy when I hit a nail.
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Of course the end product is irregular so if you have any disorders requiring you to have things stacked neat and even this could put you over the edge
I just throw them into a bin I made out of, yup, pallets
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So that's about it. My source of the red oak pallets is out of business but it was a company that received heavy machinery on the pallets if you want to find some in your area. Stores like "The Scooter Store" usually have all the pallets I want but most are pine but some are oak. On CL around here there's usually no problem finding all the pallets I need. Its free and dry wood and I don't find cutting them up to be a big issue. Obviously avoid painted pallets (the few I get of them I use to stack my wood on figuring they will past longer) or anything that has stains on them that could be chemicals. Or course you'll have nails in your ashes but I just use one of those magnets you can get at Home Depot that roofers use to pick up nails. I just run it around in the ash bucket and then pour the ashes out over it into my compost pile get them that way and I have coffee cans full of nails that I use often for misc projects.

I can process about 12 pallets per hour by myself and more with some help. I have a small stove and heat 2 rooms that are very "tight" (insulated, vapor barriers, etc) and easy to heat. During shoulder season I mostly use pallets parts to take the chill off. During the winter I use pallets parts on top of kindling to get some nice hot coals in the stove then throw my "real wood" on there.
First here's my trusty stand I built for cutting the slats off. Yes I built it from pallet parts

(broken image removed)(broken image removed)
I then either use a small chainsaw or a sawz all/reciprocating saw and cut the slats off. Sawz All is best I think because inevitably I'll hit a nail and that blade takes the abuse better than my chainsaw. Still with a good sharp blade even with the red oak pallets I sometimes get its pretty much like cutting butter.
(broken image removed)
So the pallet pieces wind up in a pile and I usually make kindling out of them with a small hatchet.
(broken image removed)
(broken image removed)
Other thing I have done with the slats is to take four or five of them and hit them with the nail gun and make small "logs" out of them. Pretty fast work with a nail gun. These saved my butt my first year burning when I realized the "seasoned" wood I bought was wet. Two of these on the fire and then a green piece of wood got me thru the winter. Not really planning to make any of them this year as I scrounged lots of wood this year.
(broken image removed)
Then I take the runners and cut them up with a table saw. I find this much faster than the Sawz All or a chainsaw. I sharpen my own blades so no biggy when I hit a nail.
(broken image removed)(broken image removed)(broken image removed)
Of course the end product is irregular so if you have any disorders requiring you to have things stacked neat and even this could put you over the edge


(broken image removed)
So that's about it. My source of the red oak pallets is out of business but it was a company that received heavy machinery on the pallets if you want to find some in your area. Stores like "The Scooter Store" usually have all the pallets I want but most are pine but some are oak. On CL around here there's usually no problem finding all the pallets I need. Its free and dry wood and I don't find cutting them up to be a big issue. Obviously avoid painted pallets (the few I get of them I use to stack my wood on figuring they will past longer) or anything that has stains on them that could be chemicals. Or course you'll have nails in your ashes but I just use one of those magnets you can get at Home Depot that roofers use to pick up nails. I just run it around in the ash bucket and then pour the ashes out over it into my compost pile get them that way and I have coffee cans full of nails that I use often for misc projects.