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Wood stove utilisation – Drolet DB03060 User Manual

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WOOD STOVE UTILISATION

Your heating unit was designed to burn wood only; no other materials should be burnt.
Wastes and other flammable materials should not be burnt in your wood stove. Any type
of wood may be used in your stove, but specific varieties have better energy yields than
others. Please consult the following table in order to make the best possible choice.

AVERAGE ENERGY YIELD OF ONE AIR DRIED CORD OF CUT WOOD

Wood species

Energy yield

(millions of BTU/cord)

Oak 29

Sugar Maple

28

Beech 26

Yellow birch

25

Ash 24

High energy yield

Elm 23

Larch (Tamarack)

23

Red Maple

23

Douglas red fir

23

Silver birch

22

Alder 18

Poplar 17

Medium energy yield

Hemlock 17

Spruce 17

Pine 17

Bass 16

Low energy yield

Fir 13

Data provided by Energy, Mines and Resources - Canada

IT IS EXTREMELY IMPORTANT THAT YOU USE DRY WOOD ONLY IN YOUR WOOD
STOVE.
The wood must have dried for 9 to 15 months, such that the humidity content (in
weight) is reduced below 20% of the weight of the log. It is very important to keep in mind
that even if the wood has been cut since one, two or even more years, it is not necessarily
dry, if it has been stored in poor conditions; under extreme conditions, it may even rot
instead of drying. The vast majority of the problems related to the operation of a wood
stove are caused by the fact that the wood used was too damp or had dried in poor
conditions. These problems can be:
• ignition problems
• creosote build-up causing chimney fires
• low energy yield
• blackened windows
• incomplete log combustion