GolfVenture Posted December 17, 2015 #1 Posted December 17, 2015 Is it advised to burn scrap waferboard in ones wood burning stove?
Flyinfool Posted December 17, 2015 #2 Posted December 17, 2015 It is not advised. the glue burns very toxic.
eagleeye Posted December 17, 2015 #3 Posted December 17, 2015 If your talking about what I think, it is held together with lots of GLUE, so no, not recommended.
Larry1963 Posted December 17, 2015 #4 Posted December 17, 2015 (edited) What is the worse that can happen........ If it doesn't go well, you will have a great story for the "Stupid Things I Did" section But I probably wouldn't do it Edited December 17, 2015 by Larry1963
Marcarl Posted December 17, 2015 #5 Posted December 17, 2015 The glue will add to the deposits in the chimney, and will light at a lower temp than the creosote. In the very least this will cause a headache for you as you will have to ascend the roof to dump a pail of water down that hole,,, if you can get there in time and it doesn't cause more damage. Further more, it provides little in the effect of heat in the stove, but might make up for that in chimney heat, and if the house goes the way of the chimney, you could temporarily heat the whole neighborhood. JMT
YamahaLarry Posted December 17, 2015 #6 Posted December 17, 2015 It can't be any worse than coal. That is some nasty, stinky stuff. IMO, biggest issue would be accumulation of gunk in your spark arrestor screen, assuming you have one.
Zzyzx Posted December 17, 2015 #7 Posted December 17, 2015 Here is some light reading regarding some of the chemicals that can be found in OSB but what the heck, probably not much worse than a BigMac patty. 1,2-Dichloroethane * BDL 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene * BDL 3-Carene BDL Acetaldehyde * BDL 67-64-1 Acetone 0.0018 U Acrolein * BDL 80-56-8 Alpha-pinene 0.064 U Benzene * BDL 127-91-3 Beta-pinene 0.019 U Bromomethane * BDL Camphene BDL Chloroethane * BDL Chloroethene * BDL Cis-1,2-dichloroethylene BDL Cumene * BDL 50-00-0 Formaldehyde * 0.0036 U Limonene BDL 67-56-1 Methanol * 0.063 U Methyl ethyl ketone * BDL Methyl isobutyl ketone * BDL Methylene chloride * BDL m,p-Xylene * BDL o-Xylene * BDL p-Cymene BDL p-Mentha-1,5-diene BDL Phenol * BDL Propionaldehyde * BDL Styrene * BDL Toluene *
Larry1963 Posted December 17, 2015 #9 Posted December 17, 2015 To help burn those chemicals off and so they do not stick anywhere inside your wood burnings stove, soak it first in lighter fluid, burns hotter and more
MikeWa Posted December 18, 2015 #10 Posted December 18, 2015 Brian How much of this stuff are you talking about? A few scrap pieces or a whole s--t load? Mike
GolfVenture Posted December 20, 2015 Author #11 Posted December 20, 2015 Thanks for all the replies. I'm going to just take them to the dump on my next load... Happy Holidays to all...
wjayg Posted December 20, 2015 #12 Posted December 20, 2015 been burning wood for years, a refurbished wood stoves is a hobby I've done dozens. A 70 year old retired fire station captain taught me that trick. You get a 32 gallon steel trash can with the lid. You get dry shavings got to be dry like you get off at chainsaw from cutting wood. You fill up the trash can you get a gallon diesel you pour the diesel in stir up with a poker stick leave it outside your house outside your garage to get a large plastic cup from Wendys or McDonalds when you want to light a fire take two pieces of angle iron 1 inch put it across the bottom of your wood stove the diesel wood shavings mix go Been doing it for 15 years I even take it camping with me to light my fire. Years ago I had to get a chimney sweep sweepout 5 minutes. Been doing it for 15 years I even take camping with me to light my fire. Years ago I had to get a chimney cleaner because I changed homeowners insurance so I could have a receipt cuz I do that myself too. I showed him what I was doing and ask him if it was bad for my chimney has no it's better than paper it won't clog. Now you owe me a beer and not a cheap one.
dacheedah Posted December 24, 2015 #13 Posted December 24, 2015 You could burn it in moderation, do yourself a huge favor and get a chimney brush and sticks and run the brush through your chimney real good while its very warm, short strokes and lower a but more short overlapping strokes, clean out the fire box, if it's cold you can get a long hose on the shop vac and remove loose particles do this every few weeks. Check the pipe with a mirror using the sun for a light
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