Any leads on one and if not, why not. Don't make sense to bring in bales and then reprocess into pellets. I've seen the homemade big ones, no small ones?
Thanks-
Ken
Thanks-
Ken
daleeper said:Kenny, I think you have answered it yourself. I keep wooling this around myself, and I come back to - it doesn't make sense.
Wood pellets were derived out of wasted sawdust at the mills, and using them as a heat source has helped reduce those piles, thus taking a surplus commodity and utilizing it well. I don't think that grinding wood down specifically for pelleting will be a good long term solution for heating here in the US. I don't think baling hay or straw in square bales and burning it will be a real good long term heating solution either, thus no market for the stove you are asking for. I really don't think growing switchgrass for pelleting will work out long term either, much as I would like to see it work.
Most of the folks that are burning bales have need for a lot of heat, have the equipment to make and feed the big bales, and have the material to bale. I can tell you from experience that it is a lot easier to move big bales mechanically than small ones.
If I were to own some sort of boiler system, one feature I would like is that the door would be big enough to fit a small square bale in, thus the option Ugly is mentioning above. If we did have small bales to get rid of, they could be burned. I have thought about building a big bale burner, and decided there are other things I can do besides bale for heat. There are too many trees around our place that need cleaned up and can be burned for heat.
Solid wood is easier to handle and store than small bales in my opinion, and I have handled both.
DaveBP said:These guys think there is a market for one.
renewablejohn said:Sorry to disappoint you all but in the uk they have been around for years hence their name farm 2000
(broken link removed to http://www.farm2000.co.uk/ht.htm)
The large ones are for round bales and the small one for little square bales.
renewablejohn said:Sorry to disappoint you all but in the uk they have been around for years hence their name farm 2000
(broken link removed to http://www.farm2000.co.uk/ht.htm)
The large ones are for round bales and the small one for little square bales.
kenny chaos said:renewablejohn said:Sorry to disappoint you all but in the uk they have been around for years hence their name farm 2000
(broken link removed to http://www.farm2000.co.uk/ht.htm)
The large ones are for round bales and the small one for little square bales.
Do you have personal experience with them?
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