If you can find customers gullible enough to purchase wood by the ton, leave it at 50 percent and give um a real good screwin.:laughing:
As long as a scale ticket is presented to the buyer for the firewood it is not illegal or screwing your customer!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Selling firewood by the ton is not illegal in any State. selling and misrepresenting green fire wood for seasoned firewood is illegal
if the moisture content is verified with a scale ticket as secondary evidence.
In New York State it is also legal to buy firewood and fireood logs by weight.
One local processor pays $33.00 per ton for firewood logs delivered
to his yard and weighed on his certified scale.
Standard firewood measures are a stacked cord being 48 by 48 by 96 inches,
128 cubic feet, or a face cord is considered basicly 48 by 18 by 96 inches BUT a face cord could also be cut at 12 inches which is what I length cut my wood at which gives you 4 face cords in one cord measure.
Some states are loosy goosy about firewood measurements and rick and rank are very old measures. With the emerald ash borer and termites becoming a greater issue the rick and rank measures will be a thing of the past eventually as legal measures for sales by weight OF ANY MATERIAL are legal means of conducting commerce.
Heat Dried/Kiln Dried firewood for sale has more value in any case and you have to have a market for the kiln dried wood to be able to sell it.
The old hay mow method of dryng always works and its easy to accomplish.
You can simply make a rectangular frame of any particular
length with 2 by 4's and making the frame with 4 by 4's to
secure the 2 by 4's to separating the lengths of 2 by 4's by
an inch to allow the air to flow into the wood you throw on
top of it or through the sides.
You can buy a fan and shutter to mount on the end of the air
drying frame and simply run it during the daylight hours and
shut it off at night.
You can always build a long plywood plenum and paint it black
and place it behind the fan and preheat the air entering the fan
and the slatted wood drying frame.
The very end of the air conduit is sealed up with a piece of
plywood to seal the end and keep all the air flowing through
the wood pile.
Throw the wood over the rectangular air conduit you made
of wood to make a pile and cover it with a "very good quality tarp"
that is water proof and weigh the edges of the tarp down to
hold it in place while you are drying the wood.
You simply run the fan which is attached to one end of the conduit
to aid in drying the wood to a certain percentage of your choosing
if you have a moisture meter.
Examining the wood for checking and cracking is also a good way to
guage drying along with a good bathroom scale to weigh the sample
piece of firewood kept in the pile.You do this before drying and during
drying to guage the amount of drying you have accomplished.