Egon
Epic Contributor
Fat pine spills and fat pine kindling work well for starting a fire.
I have an Extech MO50 about $44 on eBay. It has 2 pins and digital display and seems well built. Parent company is FLIR, well known. You can spend about as much as you want on a moisture meter but I do not see doing that. $44 gets you above the junk but below wasting your money. The outside of a piece of wood will be dryer than the inside but is still a good indicator. If the outside is over 18% (my cutoff) the inside generally is too wet to burn without creating creosote. Ideally you would do a fresh spilt of a large piece and test the center and it should be under 20%.
Our exterior air moisture stays above 80% all winter which lets Doug Fir (our most common wood) stabilize at around 14 to 18% moisture after 2 years under cover. Split at the start of the 2 years, not at the end. Wood dries much better split.
Moisture Meters | Extech Instruments
I've never been able to figure out how our firewood is supposed to dry out to the 15 - 20% moisture content target, when the humidity levels stay 40 - 80%.
Someone want to explain the physics to me?
I've never been able to figure out how our firewood is supposed to dry out to the 15 - 20% moisture content target, when the humidity levels stay 40 - 80%.
Someone want to explain the physics to me?