No. Wood is a poor conductor of electricity unless it is wet/saturated with water.
All the Bad smoke goes out in the worldand it is harder for animals and people to breath. Hello peepz
The fire point of a fuel is the temperature at which it will continue to burn for at least 5 seconds after ignition by an open flame.For wood this is very depending on moisture content (dryness) and coarseness: wood dust can be explosive, wet wood of blacknut tree hardly burnson its own even at 300 oC.
it depends on the type of wood. SOme have fuels that burn at higher or lower temperatures. It also depends on the water content of the wood. Char can be ignited at relatively low temperatures, whereas wet oak will take much longer According to this site: http://www.enviroalternatives.com/fireQ&A.html (which is a marketing site) Oak was measured burning at between 900 to 1200 degrees F in the hottest part of the fire, and between 200 and 400 degrees F in the gases around the fuel.
Amerindians live in small huts on stilts. The huts are made from the wood that they have cultivated and the huts are on stilts so that when it floods it does not get wet inside.
I have no idea what your question is, but if you have a problem with wood when wet, don't let it get wet.
wet wood
wet wood
Wood that is wet
Once the wood dries & you can do it right.
Wet wood, vegetation, and plastics will make a thick, dark smoke that should not be breathed in. Dry wood and dead leaves make a thinner, grayish smoke.
a wet cloth
it makes it wet
is wet jet swifter good for wood flooring
it is unless it gets wet
Yes it does because it is made of wood and wood floats(unless it is mouldy and wet)
Dry wood has a high resistance; wet or humid wood is a fairly good conductor.