This is a follow-up to a thread I posted back in January...Will This Wood Dry In Time
Well, today I dug down to the center of the pile in the left bay and removed 3 splits. I then split those splits at least once more to test the moisture content inside of them.
The moisture content ranged mostly around 22% - 27%. This wood is white oak, and it was freshly split and stacked 6 months ago (January)
I have attached 2 photos to show the size of the splits before and after I split them further...one is of the splits after I removed them from the center of the pile...the other is after splitting those splits.
My question is...based upon this analysis, will the wood dry enough for burning in a Blaze King by November?
It seemed most responses to my original thread were skeptical about the wood drying that quickly. But, since the center of pile seems to be so close to that magical 20% level, I'm wondering if this is a realistic expectation.
Thanks
Well, today I dug down to the center of the pile in the left bay and removed 3 splits. I then split those splits at least once more to test the moisture content inside of them.
The moisture content ranged mostly around 22% - 27%. This wood is white oak, and it was freshly split and stacked 6 months ago (January)
I have attached 2 photos to show the size of the splits before and after I split them further...one is of the splits after I removed them from the center of the pile...the other is after splitting those splits.
My question is...based upon this analysis, will the wood dry enough for burning in a Blaze King by November?
It seemed most responses to my original thread were skeptical about the wood drying that quickly. But, since the center of pile seems to be so close to that magical 20% level, I'm wondering if this is a realistic expectation.
Thanks
