Thanks. Tried putting a few random local postcodes in and it’s all good apparently. I also tried the Stanlow Oil refinery which is also well below guidance levels. Another site has it at three times the WHO guidelines though so who knows.
You’ll want this site then:
https://www.burneralert.org/
Thanks. Tried putting a few random local postcodes in and it’s all good apparently. I also tried the Stanlow Oil refinery which is also well below guidance levels. Another site has it at three times the WHO guidelines though so who knows.
Last edited by SlipperySam; 31st January 2023 at 00:10.
Log burner rule change in England could land users with £300 fines
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-64261624
B
Yeap. That’s if people use shit old leaky wood burners and shite wet unseasoned wood or coal , and so they should be fined. Luckily modern wood burners are far more efficient and cleaner than they used to be . I have two defra approved logburners in my house and we only burn seasoned or kiln dried wood. Saved loads this year on heating bills.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
It’s just doesn’t stop:
Major health warning to anyone with a wood burning stove in their home
https://www.leicestermercury.co.uk/n...e-wood-8130915
Not sure of the date of the article
B
750 times more particulates than a “truck” what a load of tosh, maybe it was a Lego truck, the problem with the syndicated press is they will publish any old rubbish without even fact finding it first, just look at all the fake or heavily distorted stories on Facebook every day now.
Anyone with any concerns can buy an air quality meter and then know the facts.
Our air quality is unaffected by the wood burner.
The worst air quality in our house is when next door has a bonfire in the garden.
Cooking also revs up the meter.
Wood burner hardly registers.
Burn dry wood, get your chimney swept and there is no problem.
I have fully read the EEB report, it was actually written by a Danish organisation with an agenda, Denmark has banned older style burners since 2008, Denmark are trying to get the rest of the EU to ban the older burners, especially their Scandinavian neighbours.
This quite nicely summarises how other European countries burn wood https://www.charltonandjenrick.co.uk...und-the-world/
I never pretended to be an expert or even particularly knowledgeable but here is an argument against the biased EEB report https://stoveindustryalliance.com/si...on-comparison/
Any argument for and against must be taken with a pinch of salt, in that report it says “In 1 hour an Ecodesign stove will emit 0.72g of PM2.5. In that time a Euro 6 HGV will have produced up to 4.3g of PM2.5.” That’s all we’ll and good but the stoves only heated a room, the wagon will have moved 26 tons of product around 50 miles.
Sent from my iPhone using TZ-UK mobile app
You referenced an official report, is the EEB the one you are refering to?
As I said, I can see nothing in the EEB report that states that provided you burn kiln dried correct wood in a suitable wood burner pollution levels are within the acceptable limits. If I've missed it, then please highlight where it appeared.
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
I'd suggest that actual evidence from an air quality meter trumps any report using generalised data.
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
Hi all
Getting our log burner fitted next month, to replace a rarely used open coal fire in the living room and hopefully reduce our oil usage.
Need to order some logs and so need somewhere to store them. I know you can buy ready made log stores, but what's peoples thoughts on repurposing this? We have a redundant rabbit hutch, a big one, double story, 6ft wide, 4ft high. If i take the doors off, will it do the job, or will that lack of ventilation on the sides, back and floor be an issue? Should i attack it a bit with a hole saw?
Cheers
Brighty
Realistically your buying dried timber so it would (wood) be fine I’d think
Another matter maybe if your buying green logs to season
You could always reverse it and cut the back out making it the front and have the mesh at the back but I’m sure it’s fine as is
I think you would have to remove lots of wood at the back to get good airflow
Have used wood stores with just an open front and it dried fine. As long as it keeps most of the rain off they seem to work ok.
Started out with nothing. Still have most of it left.
Cheers all
Will give it a go. Plan is to only use evenings and weekends, so shouldn't get though too much, though wife is home most days so if she starts lighting it, we could use more. Plan to buy a couple of dumpy bags of kiln dried logs and see how it goes. Place i'm buying the logs from sell log stores and they say there 'large' 6ft high 4 ft wide one hold 2-3 dumpy bags, so the hutch should swallow a similar amount
Give it a go by all means - just remember that 2-3 dumpy bags of seasoned wood will weigh (depending on type, moisture content etc) anything up to a tonne and the bottom of the hutch will not be designed for that. All you need to do is either knock the bottom out or fill the space beneath so it's supported.
Try to store a very limited amount of wood inside the house at any time. Try to burn it within 24hrs every time. Wood worms love timber floors, door posts etc.
A lot of people will respond with “I do ‘t have that problem!” And honestly, I’ve only seen it once. (We wanted to buy a house, a surveyor we’d hired to check the house pointed us at the holes…). But enough reason for us to limit the amount/time inside.
Had this years delivery today, went for seasoned as others on here have advised, paid £90 per builder’s bag
All put away, I’m knackered now
5 x full size dumpy bags of fully seasoned ash, oak and some silver birch dropped off in our barn yesterday. £350 delivered and stacked.
Mates rates though.
Nice to feel 'ready for winter'.
Chunky logs delivered today.
They don’t stack as efficiently as the normal ones, but love the longer burn and lower flame.
Feel like I need a longer axe vs my X11 isn’t cleaving through some of them.
Friend gave me a couple dozen eucalyptus logs again, loving the spitting sounds from the oil.