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

How much wood in a loggers cord?

Discussion in 'The Wood Pile' started by Sconnie Burner, Jun 24, 2015.

  1. Sconnie Burner

    Sconnie Burner

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    I can get a loggers cord for $125 + delivery. Listed as 4'x4'x100". How much wood will this equate to when c/s/s? I've hit the 3 yr plan (all scrounged) and want a little easier work for replacing what I use each year (roughly 3 cord). I've sold some of the lesser would I collected and have some cash to use if this sounds like a good deal. Will probably still scrounge some but will be a little more picky. Planning on selling some good wood as well seeing everyone around here is getting $115-$130 a "seasoned" face cord/truckload. Been selling my boxelder, red pine and silver maple as campfire wood for $85 a tossed, mounded truckload!
     
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  2. Grizzly Adam

    Grizzly Adam null

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    Just over a standard cord.
     
  3. shaggy wood dump hoarder

    shaggy wood dump hoarder

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    not that this is official, but for folks around central and western Wisconsin, a face cord (4x8x16") pretty close to a truck load is about a third to just under a third of a full cord, and primo hardwood is roughly 60 to 75a pick up load (or a face cord or a third of a full cord) this is strictly reference, same sized load of soft wood is 40-70, dried prices of course.
     
  4. TurboDiesel

    TurboDiesel

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    is a 4'x4' stack of 8' log lengths. I'm thinking that would be less than a cord of c/s/s firewood wouldn't it?
     
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  5. TurboDiesel

    TurboDiesel

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    and you do the cutting and splitting and stacking and seasoning?
     
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  6. Sconnie Burner

    Sconnie Burner

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    A full cord around here goes from $250-$300. And not so sure its even dry. So even if its just shy of a cord I'm thinking its still a decent deal. And I enjoy running the saw and splitter. Just looking to see if anyone had some hard self measured #'s. I understand there will be some variation in size.
     
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  7. Canadian border VT

    Canadian border VT

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    SB, Grizzly Adam had a thread on log load calculator, so if he says cord I would go with it. yes it a good deal depending on type of wood. meaning oak maple real good deal lesser woods less so.
     
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  8. Grizzly Adam

    Grizzly Adam null

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    That's 4' x 4' x 8 1/3' which equals 133 1/3 square feet

    A cord is 4' x 4' x 8' or 128 square feet.

    Therefore the logger's cord you mentioned above equals 1.041666667 standard cord.
     
  9. Oldman47

    Oldman47

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    My bet is the logger is cutting to an arbitrary 100 inches vs the real value of 96 inches just so he can get a bit sloppy and still give you a full cord. Labor is often a huge cost compared to other factors so a quick and easy measurement pays off for him.
     
  10. Paul bunion

    Paul bunion

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    Is this for a log load sold as 8 cords /$1000 or similar? You should get close to what is advertised.
     
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  11. TurboDiesel

    TurboDiesel

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    Would that still be a cord AFTER it's c/s/s ?
     
  12. Grizzly Adam

    Grizzly Adam null

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    As much as a standard cord would be...
     
  13. haveissues

    haveissues

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    It would work out to about a cord once split and stacked if the wood is fairly straight.
     
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  14. Backwoods Savage

    Backwoods Savage Moderator

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    A cord is a cord. If you choose to cut up a stack that is 4' x 4' x 8' you are getting a cord no matter what. Of course you'll have a bit of sawdust at the end but the point is that it is still a legitimate cord of wood.
     
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  15. rottiman

    rottiman

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    1.05 standard bush cord. Depending what the wood is, it is a good deal. A bush cord of mixed hardwood up here c/s and delivered is running in the $245. neighborhood.
     
  16. My IS heats my home

    My IS heats my home

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    Log length out my way is $95/cord, green. Not sure how this number figures into a loggers cord.
     
  17. MasterMech

    MasterMech The Mechanical Moderator

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    I'd welcome that extra four inches as each cut in that 8' log will remove about 3/8" of wood. You'd lose a little over 2.25" off each log just to saw kerf plus have a 1.5" cookie left over.

    I bet that 1.5" cookie disappears too as nobody is THAT accurate with a chainsaw. If you cut 6 rounds with an average length of 16.5" from every log you'd wind up with nearly nothing leftover except saw chips and save 1 cut in each log by not having to trim the last round.
     
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  18. papadave

    papadave

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    Right where I want to be.
    My last log load varied from under 96" all the way up to 104", if I remember correctly.
    The only way to guarantee similar length rounds was a tape, and I use 1/4" as my kerf amount, but did basically what you said and would end up with short rounds, longer rounds, or a combo and sometimes 5 all the same with one either too short or too long.
    Very confuzzling, but I managed to live through it.:rofl: :lol: