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- From: galway@chtm.eece.unm.edu (Denis McKeon)
- Subject: Re: Wood vs. Presto-type logs
- Message-ID: <+7yr_km@lynx.unm.edu>
- Date: Thu, 07 Jan 93 07:59:11 GMT
- Organization: Connemara - Computing for People
- References: <1993Jan5.223159.29046@ide.com>
- X-Mailer: Mail User's Shell (7.0.1 12/13/89)
- Bcc: forman@ide.com
- Status: OR
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <1993Jan5.223159.29046@ide.com> forman@ide.com (Bonnie Forman) writes:
- >
- > - Can you really only burn one at a time?
-
- Ed had a lot of good points, as I would expect,
- but I'll respond to this question with a strong caution.
-
- Yes, burn only one log at a time. Do not poke at the burning wax & sawdust
- log as you might poke at a wood log. Do not rip off the paper & crumple
- the log into pieces. Close cover before striking. Do not hold in hand.
-
- How do I know, you ask? :-) Well, a friend on the ocean likes those
- damm wax and sawdust logs, and asked me to light one for her. And me,
- being an ex-New England fireplace fiddler of no small experience,
- and a former log cabin wood-heater (at 8250 feet it takes about 8 full
- cords per cabin per winter) I had no problem at all lighting the log.
- (well, the F. manual is printed on the side, right side up, you know,
- and the damper was already open, so what could go wrong?)
-
- So I lit the damm log. But I couldn't leave well enough alone, oh, no.
- After it had burned for a bit I poked it, just to remind it who was boss.
- And it broke into two parts. And flames sprung up and filled the fireplace,
- and singed my eyebrows and moustache, not to mention the fuzz on my chin.
- So I shut the glass doors tight, and started hunting for the extinguisher.
-
- The blast furnace eventually burned back down, without cracking the
- glass doors, and the burning hair smell eventually went away, and most
- of the hair even grew back, except in front on top, for some reason.
- When I read the rest of TFM, on another log, a separate caution box
- warned me not to do what I had done. So now you know too.
-
- After trying both real wood, and the ersatz logs, I prefer real wood.
-
- The fake logs do have a place - if you have no place to store firewood -
- and I mean 1/4 cord or so (4'x4'x2' == .25 cord) - and you don't heat
- with wood or need any heat from the fire, then yeah, the fake logs make
- a nice little pleasant wall of flame for a few hours, and they are
- utterly predictable - no sparks, knots, snaps, crackles, pops, etc.
-
- But if you want a warm fire every night, and you have a place to keep
- some wood (most of it outdoors, and several fire's worth next to the
- fireplace), then buy some decent dry dense firewood & some good kindling
- - I like used thin wooden roofing shingles, myself - and learn to lay
- and tend a good fire. Just never leave the fire alone in case it decides
- to take a walk while you're gone, and never poke at those fake logs :-)
-
- --
- Denis McKeon
- galway@chtm.eece.unm.edu
-
- QED: Quit and Eat Dinner
-