Logging Out
Dec. 1st, 2020 04:33 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Lisa hitched up the utility trailer yesterday evening, and this afternoon we drove the short distance to Big R and bought a pallet of firewood. It turned out to be Pres-To-Logs after all, and they had to call the manager to sort it out. I also bought two more bags of birdseed while I was there. At the moment, I'd prefer to not have to go in there again for a while, but it's not exactly clear how long a pallet of the logs lasts. Of course, much of it is variable with how cold it gets.

I took the opportunity to measure the two kinds of firelogs. One of the few North Idaho logs we left is at the top: it's 32.5 cm long and has a diameter of 10 cm, which is about 2,550 cm3. One of the Pres-To-Logs is at the bottom: it's 29 cm long with a diameter of 9 cm, for a volume of about 1,840 cm3. Both are made by similar processes of squeezing sawdust until it forms a log shape. That's why they both dissolve in water; there's nothing holding them together other than the initial pressure under which they were formed.
The North Idaho logs are about 140% the size of the Pres-To-Logs, but the pallets are roughly the same total size and weight, and they seem to contain roughly the same calorific content, so they are broadly comparable. However, I do prefer the larger logs and would buy them if it were easier to get them.

I took the opportunity to measure the two kinds of firelogs. One of the few North Idaho logs we left is at the top: it's 32.5 cm long and has a diameter of 10 cm, which is about 2,550 cm3. One of the Pres-To-Logs is at the bottom: it's 29 cm long with a diameter of 9 cm, for a volume of about 1,840 cm3. Both are made by similar processes of squeezing sawdust until it forms a log shape. That's why they both dissolve in water; there's nothing holding them together other than the initial pressure under which they were formed.
The North Idaho logs are about 140% the size of the Pres-To-Logs, but the pallets are roughly the same total size and weight, and they seem to contain roughly the same calorific content, so they are broadly comparable. However, I do prefer the larger logs and would buy them if it were easier to get them.