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Home > Off Topic > Getting wood..... |
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tanloverluke Member Since: 19 Mar 2013 Location: Honiton Posts: 917 |
Seems a fun little piece of equipment but I wonder how much moisture is left in the brick? If you had to season the brick to bring the moisture level down, would it still be intact or would it all break apart? "Proper" briquette machines employ heat to melt the lignin. I wouldn't burn anything "unseasoned", even if they do burn for a long time. Maybe they burn for a long time because they're too wet Recently bought a 2007 RRS HSE TDV6 for a Pimp-My-Ride-Project. DONE: Meduza front bumper, AB rear bumper, AB tailpipes, calipers repainted, rear upper tailgate upgrade, side steps, AB front grille, AB side vents, rear LED lights, clear side repeaters, integrated daytime running lights, LED headlights. TO DO: color code sills and pillars. |
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Mon Dec 08 2014 1:30pm |
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Stuart Member Since: 17 Oct 2013 Location: Manchester Posts: 581 |
Well, you dry them out, you don't just burn them. You know when they are right by the weight. I did some just now, maybe only 20. Ideally, you would build them up through the summer and by winter you are golden. They dont break up as they dry as you mulch the paper first so it ends up like dried, compressed paper mache. I was yapping to the blokes who make them for ages when I picked mine up and got the full SP. KP, yes, you can add wood shavings, coal dust, leaves, etc. Anything that will dry and burn clean really. Shredded paper will be easier to mulch as well. The bloke gives you a jobby he makes that goes in your drill to prep the paper too. Last edited by Stuart on Mon Dec 08 2014 5:13pm. Edited 1 time in total |
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Mon Dec 08 2014 5:09pm |
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Stuart Member Since: 17 Oct 2013 Location: Manchester Posts: 581 |
Do you still have some of that for delivery near Glossop? |
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Mon Dec 08 2014 5:11pm |
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tanloverluke Member Since: 19 Mar 2013 Location: Honiton Posts: 917 |
very interesting. how are the briquettes once they have dried out, i.e are they still intact/dense? Recently bought a 2007 RRS HSE TDV6 for a Pimp-My-Ride-Project.
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Mon Dec 08 2014 5:13pm |
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Stuart Member Since: 17 Oct 2013 Location: Manchester Posts: 581 |
The ones I have done are quite solid. Depends how well you mix I suppose.
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Mon Dec 08 2014 5:17pm |
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kp Member Since: 18 Jan 2012 Location: Ex Bashing! Posts: 91 |
Stuart drop me a PM as I sure do
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Mon Dec 08 2014 5:58pm |
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kp Member Since: 18 Jan 2012 Location: Ex Bashing! Posts: 91 |
For drying them out like I suggest with the wood, a small pile near the fire does the job easily enough, or like my nana old ingle nook, a pile each side and as one empties repile it and use from the other side of the fire FFRR Owner, SSRR engine destroyer!(*2) & Creator of SSRR |
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Mon Dec 08 2014 6:01pm |
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Stuart Member Since: 17 Oct 2013 Location: Manchester Posts: 581 |
They clog up. Its like a T shape with a twist on it. Works quite well. Although it did cross my mind to find some kind of commercial mixing thing, having a few machines, some lads making them, and flogging bags of overpriced hand-made, super eco-friendly, recycled, eco-bricks to the local Yummy Mummies at Mottram Show or Chelford. |
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Mon Dec 08 2014 6:06pm |
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kp Member Since: 18 Jan 2012 Location: Ex Bashing! Posts: 91 |
Cement mixer maybe?? FFRR Owner, SSRR engine destroyer!(*2) & Creator of SSRR |
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Mon Dec 08 2014 6:38pm |
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