.IIn theory you are correct wouln't be worrying about neurotic aspects. of weight. Wood properly collected and sold is dried for say 3 years..IIn theory you are correct wouln't be worrying about neurotic aspects. of weightIf all are at the same moisture content, otherwise even weight is flawed.
Bush cord 4x4x8 split.
Face cord 16"x4x8 split.
The term 'facve' cord is not an accepted term..There's a definiton of 'cord' the rest of it is fanatsy...dreamed up by someone, somewhere.Bush cord 4x4x8 split.
Face cord 16"x4x8 split.
I understand perfectly I thnink, what he wrote..an argument about what actually constitutes a 'cord'...it doesn't matter what is said even by narcissists given control of nations there'll always be an argument and 'you're fired' doesn't actually resolve it. "Not understanding" is a form of rejection which may not be the fault of the proposer. . What 'he' said is correct and what you said is correct but who gives a toss about 'cord' when it has a definition but is almost impossible to guarantee. ...and is as written by another here, a con-job in some cases. Only when agreement has been reached on what 'is' a cord of wood and people comply with both definiiton and intention of it in supply does it have any practical meaning.I can’t make heads or tails of what you said.
So here I’ll help you out, a cord is 128 cubic feet of tightly stacked firewood (that means wood cut, split, and ready to burn).
Ok...that's an 'electric cord'..in an unsafe condtion...
Ok...that's an 'electric cord'..in an unsafe condtion...
Yes you are right...another example, on my property are huge morell mushrooms...sold 'as is' $42/kilo....sold sliced in small packs...$1200/kilo.In England that would be called a ******.
Actually it is definably unsafe ...'plugged in' we would be talking of 'risk.New and uninstalled isn’t unsafe.
Actually it is definably unsafe ...'plugged in' we would be talking of 'risk.
My last attempt so you on't confuse others. You don't know the difference...or pretend not to know the difference between 'unsafe' and 'at risk'. I do.New and uninstalled isn’t unsafe.
That is what Ohio does. They carve out an exception for "bundles" as sold at convenience stores, etc.A cord is 128 cubic feet of split, reasonably tightly stacked firewood. Many states codify exactly that in state law. It's really a very simple concept that many people seem to want to make far more complicated than it needs to be.
I hadn't heard about that exception but never really looked that hard. As has been pointed out in this thread, no one actually enforces these laws. I just figured the bundle thing was another example of that lack of enforcement. I did tree work and sold firewood in Ohio for 20 years, including a little bit in bundles. I'm curious now. Got a link to that exception in the ORC?That is what Ohio does. They carve out an exception for "bundles" as sold at convenience stores, etc.
Post #1:No one has yet described a actual cord of wood. I’ve worked in the woods more than 40 years. A cord of wood is 4x4x8 in 8 ft length. 128 cubic feet of wood and air. If you cut and split that cord and stack it in a tight pile it will no longer be a 128 cubic feet. If you stack it very loosely it will be more then 128 cubic feet. If you were able to take a tightly stacked pile of 128 cubic feet and reassemble it into 8 ft logs it would be more then 128 cubic feet. If you take a 10 cord load of logs and cut split and tightly stack it in 128 cubic foot piles you’d be lucky to have 8 piles.
Errrrmm...no. Every time you split and repile tightly a stack of wood it will grow. As for a 10 cord load of logs stacking to 8cord, you got cheated. It should have restacked to almost 11 cord.
I would rephrase the explanation of "To be installed" to It is a "Bait and Bite Cord" If someone needs edjimacated you give them the skived end and then you get to energize it.It’s a new cord to be installed into an appliance, there’s no reason to plug it in like it is. Sheesh!
And plus the humor went over your head.
I think or at least thought the reverse is the case at least for they type of logs that could be run through a processor. Look at this rack and the rounds waiting to be split in the picture. There sure look like more void in the rounds. Also look at how the vertical side in the splits matches the vertical end board versus how rounds would both only touch the end at one spot and perhaps not go all the way due to fitting between the rounds below.The same 16" rounds grow in volume when split and stacked,
Post #1:
"A cord of wood is 4' x 4' x 8' length. 128 cu. ft of wood and air." Pretty sure the legal definition for commerce includes the words firewood, and tightly stacked.
It is true that if you take 100" logs and stack them in a pile 8' long x 4' high you would have two cord (or is it cords?) of logs. These two cord of logs will stack out considerably less when cut into 16" rounds. The same 16" rounds grow in volume when split and stacked, but still comes up way short of two 128 cu. ft. tightly stacked cords.
Curly Cherry did a work bench example using dowels which proved inaccurate because of the difference between straight uniform dowels and logs. At least on the twenty 20 cord log loads I've gotten they don't stack on the truck as uniform as dowels. Including a good cord of junk, shorts, punky, etc. I get about 17 cord. 16 that I can sell, out of 20. The rest, the junk, is thrown in row packs and later bundled, same as the sellable stuff, and seasoned for one year for us to burn in a catalytic wood stove.
As stated by some, they believe otherwise.
If you purchase a cord of firewood you expect a full cord of seasoned wood. The reality is, if you cut/split/stack a cord of wood, a year later after seasoning the stacked piles will no longer be 4' high due to settling and seasoning. Is it still a cord of wood if it use to stack out as one, and does not when delivered?
Obviously not, in my opinion. As the purchaser, you, should get 128 cu. ft. of tightly stacked firewood.
Responding to Turnkey 4099, and not just him, as this is a common statement.
"As for a 10 cord load... you got cheated." That's not my experience.
View attachment 953913
Topped off, below.
View attachment 953916View attachment 953917View attachment 953918View attachment 953919View attachment 953920View attachment 953921
Six racks would be two cord of rounds. This is a partial fifth rack and done.
View attachment 953922
Splitting the rounds. This is a partial fifth rack and done.
Conclusion: logs to rounds, loss due to nesting better; rounds to splits, gain back some.
Logs to splits, loss of 5' high (one complete rack plus 12") x 8' wide x 16" length in two cord.
Converting to cu. in.
92,160 (cu. in. shy of two cord)/442,368 (cu. in. in two cord) = 20.83% loss (logs to splits)
estimating logs to rounds loss.
110,592 (6' x 8'x 16" short of rounds)/442,368 = 25% loss (logs to rounds)
View attachment 953923View attachment 953924
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