He knows it and we know it. At this point we are just humoring him.
Excuse me while I go throw some old, used vinyl siding in my Jotul.
I figured that Tree,I just hate to see anyone get in trouble,when they do not need to.
He knows it and we know it. At this point we are just humoring him.
Excuse me while I go throw some old, used vinyl siding in my Jotul.
anyone have a chart for which brand of tires have the most btu's i've heard that firestone burn the best but goodyears split alot better.
Wampum-
3 points and a question or two;
Did the cement plant you worked at for 35-years use tires as fuel for the kilns? Are we comparing Apples-to-Apples?
- If anyone here should know about cement kilns it sounds like it would be you. It could very well be that I didn’t understand completely what dad said (I’ll ask him), or maybe things have changed since 45-years ago (which is likely possible). If I’m wrong... than I’m wrong... and it sounds like I am.
- Unlike industry, private Citizens and homeowners are rarely required to secure state and/or federal environmental program permits to burn any type of heating fuel, but burning some fuels may fall under local ordinances.
- I didn’t advocate the burning of tires in home heating appliances... read my last (before this one) post where I recommend against it.
she's burning more than coal if it stinx bad
never smelled soft coal but makes sense- sulfur smells like rotten eggs?I guess that would depend on the type and quality of the coal. Anthracite,hard good coal burns clean with high BTU's with little odor all the way to High sulfur coal that is softer burns with less BTU's and more odor.
I wondered what that smell was :yoyo:The worst part is the snow around the house is always black.
Asphalt shingles work best, you just peel off another slice as the fire needs it. No muss no fuss.
I wondered what that smell was :yoyo:
I unhooked the oxygen bottle off of the torch set, got the hose plumbed into the side of the stove. I'm getting ready to throw some tire chunks, dried hog **** and dead chickens that froze to death in the stove.
What pressure do you think I need to set the oxygen regulator at to get the optimun burn?
Will I have to plumb in the acytelene to get the fire hot enough to heat the house, it's been a little cold lately.
I've already burned all the railroad ties and old utility poles I had soaking in oil and diesel, damn flues a mess, looks like it is coated in tar, but I guess it adds
insulation.
I unhooked the oxygen bottle off of the torch set, got the hose plumbed into the side of the stove. I'm getting ready to throw some tire chunks, dried hog **** and dead chickens that froze to death in the stove.
What pressure do you think I need to set the oxygen regulator at to get the optimun burn?
Will I have to plumb in the acytelene to get the fire hot enough to heat the house, it's been a little cold lately.
I've already burned all the railroad ties and old utility poles I had soaking in oil and diesel, damn flues a mess, looks like it is coated in tar, but I guess it adds
insulation.
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