I have never run a woodchipper. Is it easy to produce a lot of stock from just bushes and stuff ? Can it eat big pieces of lumber ?
I've chopped up tree wood. Chopping it into small pieces to produce gas seems like a lot of work. I imagine there is way more pounds of tree wood on most land than bushes...
I've operated a good quality consumer one. It is a lot harder work and harder on the body than I had expected. It is very loud. There is a whole lot of vibration and jerking around. I don't normally wear work gloves, but you need them for this. The limbs and crap get ripped out of your hands and stuff is flying everywhere.
Wood chips sound way cooler and easier until you try to make your own. I'm guessing one of the really big industrial kinds are a lot easier to use, but they are really expensive and even renting them adds up.
With that said... a lot of people will contact a nearby tree limber and you can often get them to dump a truck load of wood chips at your place for free if you are near enough. But you'll need to figure out a way to protect them from rain and circulate them enough so they will be dry enough instead of sitting there and rotting.
This is all for a SHTF scenario. I could also use them for mulch but my immediate thought was fuel for making charcoal and biochar out of scrap wood and brush.
I've messed with them in a distant life. I think it was more watching other people do it. The REALLY big ones make it easy. The little ones are better than nothing. I've been looking into Biochar and all of it's various uses, also all of the ways to make it.
On the low end you dig a pit, burn wood, and put out the fire before it burns to ash. The high end runs a furnace off of wood gas. Biochar is very interesting stuff as it really improves the quality of your soil. With charcoal you need to be concerned with the quality of the wood you use. With bio char you can use any wood you're burying it anyway.
Maybe it is prep, maybe it's just daydreaming. IDK. It's good stuff to look into though.
I saw a video where someone used an air compressor to fill a propane tank. The problem is that they used it right away. It can compress but I don't know how long it will store for. All I know about wood gas is that it is comprised of several gasses so do they separate? Do they turn into goo? More investigation is required.
iamtanmay@wolfballs.com 2 years ago
I have never run a woodchipper. Is it easy to produce a lot of stock from just bushes and stuff ? Can it eat big pieces of lumber ?
I've chopped up tree wood. Chopping it into small pieces to produce gas seems like a lot of work. I imagine there is way more pounds of tree wood on most land than bushes...
syntaxerror@wolfballs.com 2 years ago
I've operated a good quality consumer one. It is a lot harder work and harder on the body than I had expected. It is very loud. There is a whole lot of vibration and jerking around. I don't normally wear work gloves, but you need them for this. The limbs and crap get ripped out of your hands and stuff is flying everywhere.
Wood chips sound way cooler and easier until you try to make your own. I'm guessing one of the really big industrial kinds are a lot easier to use, but they are really expensive and even renting them adds up.
With that said... a lot of people will contact a nearby tree limber and you can often get them to dump a truck load of wood chips at your place for free if you are near enough. But you'll need to figure out a way to protect them from rain and circulate them enough so they will be dry enough instead of sitting there and rotting.
Scruffy_Nerfherder@wolfballs.com 2 years ago
This is all for a SHTF scenario. I could also use them for mulch but my immediate thought was fuel for making charcoal and biochar out of scrap wood and brush.
iamtanmay@wolfballs.com 2 years ago
Very very insightful. Thank you.
Scruffy_Nerfherder@wolfballs.com 2 years ago
I've messed with them in a distant life. I think it was more watching other people do it. The REALLY big ones make it easy. The little ones are better than nothing. I've been looking into Biochar and all of it's various uses, also all of the ways to make it.
On the low end you dig a pit, burn wood, and put out the fire before it burns to ash. The high end runs a furnace off of wood gas. Biochar is very interesting stuff as it really improves the quality of your soil. With charcoal you need to be concerned with the quality of the wood you use. With bio char you can use any wood you're burying it anyway.
Maybe it is prep, maybe it's just daydreaming. IDK. It's good stuff to look into though.
iamtanmay@wolfballs.com 2 years ago
No, no, its good to talk about stuff like this. How do they store the stuff ? You have to get a compressor and put it into a steel bottle ?
I've seen someone run a methane powered scooter, but it only got like 6 or 7 miles for 10 liters of uncompressed swamp gas
Scruffy_Nerfherder@wolfballs.com 2 years ago
I saw a video where someone used an air compressor to fill a propane tank. The problem is that they used it right away. It can compress but I don't know how long it will store for. All I know about wood gas is that it is comprised of several gasses so do they separate? Do they turn into goo? More investigation is required.