Moisture Meter Calibration

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Gotrek

Burning Hunk
Nov 20, 2014
242
Manitoba
I just cut a few trees during a cold spell (-25 - -30 Celcius).

I cut a spruce, an aspen and a couple box elders.

I brought a piece of each in the garage to let it warm up then a few days later split it and tested the moisture content.

The spruce was around 22-25 %
The Aspen was around 17 - 20 %
The box Elder was 15 -17%

I think my meter is lying to me is there a way to test it? That just seems pretty dry. Granted Frozen wasteland trees probably not as moist in winter but I would think it shouldn't be ready to burn out of the box :)
 
Got any chunks of dimensional lumber around that you can test? Wood inside the garage or house that you know is dry? Fresh split and compare...
 
I do, what moisture content would a normal 2x4 be? It's inside the garage so similar condition to the logs I brought in.
 
As I understand, most moisture meters are calibrated somewhere in the 60's-70's Fahrenheit. Is your garage that warm or just slightly warmer than outside? I've had my meter vary by as much as 10% when wood is measured at 70ish F vs in the 30's F.
 
As I understand, most moisture meters are calibrated somewhere in the 60's-70's Fahrenheit. Is your garage that warm or just slightly warmer than outside? I've had my meter vary by as much as 10% when wood is measured at 70ish F vs in the 30's F.
Thanks, I've been wondering how much of a difference the temperature makes. Does the MM reading tend to run higher or lower at cold temps?
 
I thought I read somewhere pressing the pins into your open palm, not far enough to draw blood, should be ~25%
 
27% probing my palm fairly hard.

No reading in 2x4 just reads lo. But the wood I brought in to the house is now 36% for the elder and 24% for the aspen. So I guess temp has a pretty decent impact :)
 
Just probed my hand, 29% in the meaty part at the thumb
 
i tested some box elder that was 93%....