How much wood you go thur in a day.

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It is going to be hard to get an answer on this one. Species of wood, how seasoned, type of burner, outside temp, insulation, burning techniques, chimney type, all make a difference as to how much is used per day. For me, almost every single day is different. Some days I may fill the stove four times, some days maybe ten.

Maybe if we knew the reason you were asking we could help more?
 
I have a MF10000e and was just wondering if I am doing good with wood or do I need to work on things better. I fill mine once in the morning (5:30am) and again at (5:30pm). I keep my stove at 180 and usually put in about 6pcs of wood about 30 inches long split in half of a 12 to 14 to 18 inch in diameter. Some really good hardwood and some just ok(free firewood). Just kinda curious about it. Thanks
 
I have a trash can strapped to a hand dolly wih the lid on to help with mosture. Not a real big one but it will last at least one full day.
 
Ditto - wheel barrow a day. (A REALLY full wheel barrow). Wife likes it hot here, so now that it's finally "cold" we're burning like crazy - I figure about a face cord a week. We're in a new house, actually, and it's on the drafty side so I'm not sure how much we'll need all winter. I put down 6 cords when we moved in and I'm hoping it'll be enough!

SO many things affect this - size of the space you heat, how efficient (heat-loss wise) the space you heat is, how efficient your stove is, how hot you like it, species, water content, etc. etc.

I think the wheel barrow is the perfect measuring tool. Figure this - you could say "I've got a 1-wheel-barrow house" or "my stove is really old - it's a 2-barrow-a-day monster" and you'd have a measurement that would make the measurement guys happy - and still wouldn't mean anything because who knows how big your wheel barrow is! :laugh:
 
I'm running a hampton HI-300, which is a medium size insert. Fire box will hold five or six splits at a time. If I'm burning softer woood like silver maple, I need to load five times a day. If I'm burning oak/locust, I usually load 3 or 4 times a day. So on average 20 to 30 splits a day.
 
about a wheel barrow a day, except on days like today. 21 degrees and the wind is blowing 20-30 mph. the wind can almost double my usage.
 
With my OWB that I heat 2 houses with I go through close to a cord week this time of the year. Don't know what a rick or a MF10000e are.
 
We burn on average 16 splits per day. That's heating a 1,400 SF house in Delaware where the winters typically don't get very cold.

Just over 2 cord usually gets us through the winter. That's burning maple, red oak and gum.
 
I cut all my wood in 24" pieces, if there over 12 inches in diameter I split them at least once.
My OWB uses about 8 to 10 pieces per day.

If I heat my barn for the day it adds a few pieces.
 
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I have a old cast upland 207 woodstove and it heats my just under 2000 sq. foot ranch house and the past 2 days and nights I used less than a half a wheel b. of oak and few pieces of crab apple tree wood. House is 78 in it now and the temp on stove top is about 400 degrees. For a old stove it does the trick.
 
I go through ~1/7 of 1/4 cord daily. LOL

I have racks that are 1/4 cord. I go through 1 weekly on average in Northern NJ on a hill with a 2500 sq ft standard insulation ranch.

ac
 
e2300 wood usage

I have a E2300 CB owb.Normal temps, 20-30's,2 healthy wheelbarrow loads of decent hardwood a day.(Red Oak,Sugar Maple)Kigh end consumption of 1/3-1/2 cord/week when it's COLD and WINDY(5-15 degrees.)I'm looking to utilize a Jotul Elg/Moose for the fringe heating months.Sometimes it seems to be overkill using the boiler when I just want to alleviate a little early morning chill in the house.:popcorn:
 
agree with many posters- about an overflowing wheelbarrow a day in average temp (low 25 and high 40 degrees) using assorted varieties of hard and soft wood. Add 50% if the temp doesn't reach the 30's. Heating 2400sq. ft with 25' ceilings and 36 windows- needless to say my insulation factor is very not good!
 

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