This will depend on the type of wood. but generally it ranges from 6,000 to 8,000 btu's. The harder the wood or more dense it is, is also a general rule to how much heat it wold have.
Hickory has the most BTUs per cord....
There are no "manmade" woods. Wood is a natural resource. Unless you mean something like plywood which is just chips of wood compressed together.
Simular to manufactured wood, the materials used in a engineered door come from manufactured wood, this wood is in fact wood, but its saw dust or small wood-chips compressed together with a epoxy type glue to make a panels, (partical board, MDF, etc.) they can also be veneered plywood glued on a wooden frame.
Technically speaking, yes. If it is artificially composed of two or more materials, such as wood chips and glue, it is a composite.
First they have to make it into wood chips. next they make that into pulp. they take the pulp and stir it and fibers in big containers to make it into a thick piece of gray paper. last they cut it into thin pices and wala its paper
It doesn't matter what you're weighing. One pound equals 453.59237 grams.
chips/shavings/what-have-you...of WOOD(GASP!).
The rule of thumb for wood chips is that they weighs 550 pounds per cubic yard. So a ton of wood chips would equal about four cubic yards.
Wood chips come in many flavors but the most popular are hickory, oak,pecan and mesquite flavored. Also, the more wood chips you use, the greater the flavor.
The bulk density of wood chips varies from about 550 Ibs/cu yd for new wood chips to 750 Ibs/cu yd for recycled wood chips.
Hickory has the most BTUs per cord....
Hickory has the most BTUs per cord....
jack pine, 17.1 BTUs per cord
This will depend on the type of wood. but generally it ranges from 6000 to 8000
Paper, but not wood chips.
The number of BTUs per cord of wood depends on the type of wood. One cord of cottonwood is equal to 16.1 million BTUs. One cord of hard maple is equal to 23.7 million BTUs, and one cord of red oak wood is equal to 24.4 million BTUs.
Lots of tiny, bright yellow spots on wood chips is likely mold. The area where the wood chips are is likely damp.