In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

palletizing firewood

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by Jim Barry, Dec 31, 2018.

  1. Jim Barry

    Jim Barry

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    Trying a new way to split and stack firewood. Previous idea was crating, which works, but takes time and resources to build the crates. So I thought about strapping the wood to pallets. I made a crib that would hold a 32x48" pallet, 36" high. Equals 32 cu ft (1/4 cord).
    20181231-firewood-1-gina.jpg

    While its first time doing it this way, and trying to figure out the strap tensioner tool, it took some fussing. Eventually we got it strapped and I moved it off the crib with the skidsteer and into the back of the truck. It kind of went sideways from that point. It fell apart a bit.

    20181231-firewood-2.jpg

    So I reverted back to our first idea of a full wood crate.

    20181231-firewood-4.jpg

    Not one to give up on an idea right away, we'll try again with the strapping in the new year. We're racing sunset at this point. In the meantime, the customer came along and picked up what we just split.

    20181231-firewood-5.jpg
     
  2. Woodsnwoods

    Woodsnwoods

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    Looks like a lot of work. Well done and nice stacks.
     
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  3. Jim Barry

    Jim Barry

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    Its work no matter how you look at it. For us, we want to make sure the wood we sell is dry first. The quickest way to do that is to split and stack it first. Just so happens that these logs were cut 8 months ago. A split piece of 6" maple measured 10% moisture content. Which is great, means its ready to sell as soon as we can split it.
     
  4. Jack Straw

    Jack Straw

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    Some pics of my moveable stacks


    8EEB6544-33A0-4897-BA14-ABAAE55F393D.jpeg BE8247CC-6A89-4579-AEB1-9981835EEAB5.jpeg 3BA42206-5C78-4C2D-9A52-DD1E8770B554.jpeg B48D708D-23B7-4109-BB50-A3A9E3708B3D.jpeg 4AFEC34E-2CE8-43BC-A6D6-0DB2FED6FDCF.jpeg
     
  5. Slocum

    Slocum

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  6. Farmchuck

    Farmchuck

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  7. Dub11

    Dub11

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  8. Farmchuck

    Farmchuck

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  9. Jack Straw

    Jack Straw

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    I have no idea what they weigh loaded. When the wood is green I don’t fill them completely, maybe 3/4. I’ve made all sizes. The ones On the pallets are much more stable on the ground and to move. Smaller is usually better Because my tractor is on the small size. I have a breeze way between my garage and barn and I can bring down several racks in a half an hour. It sure is a quick way to move wood around. Put boards under your racks or they will freeze to the ground and you won’t be able to move them in the winter.
     
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  10. Jim Barry

    Jim Barry

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    Maybe 1000 pallets a year. I've certainly not going to pay $2,000 for a battery operated tool. I get that they may be handy, but nope.
     
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  11. Jim Barry

    Jim Barry

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    I've been experimenting too with different size racks.
    20181013-firewood-crates-5.jpg

    20181013-firewood-crates-7.jpg

    20181017-firewood-workyard.jpg
     
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  12. Farmchuck

    Farmchuck

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  13. Jack Straw

    Jack Straw

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  14. Jack Straw

    Jack Straw

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    They make them much stronger
     
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  15. Jim Barry

    Jim Barry

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    Nope, just dump and go. 20181119-firewood-loading-2.jpg
     
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  16. Farmchuck

    Farmchuck

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    Oh I’m sure they do. I built some similar for my outdoor wood stove but I kept bonking my head in em as I unloaded them. Just wondered if you experienced the same thing or not.
     
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  17. Farmchuck

    Farmchuck

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    Ah I gotcha.
     
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  18. Jack Straw

    Jack Straw

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    Ave neever hit mi hed
     
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  19. Jim Barry

    Jim Barry

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    Here's what were were doing (still are) for our own house supply. 8 bins. Each holds 128 cu ft. Hand stacked in, hand stacked out. Covers go on in the fall before the snow comes.
    20180615-firewood-6.jpg
    20130827-firewoodpilecoverup.jpg
    20130827-firewoodpilecoverup2.jpg
    20130827-firewoodpilecoverup3-600x800.jpg
     
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  20. brenndatomu

    brenndatomu

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    They make a hand operated version too...much cheaper.
    Ever got a shipment in that was strapped down with wood "stringers" (dunno what they're actually called) across the top for the strapping to lay in/on (they have a groove milled in them to keep the strap from sliding off) I think that would work for your setup. Have to experiment with if it works better to have the "stringers" on top, or the sides.
    Nice setup BTW! :yes:
     
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