Wood treated with water-borne preservatives must not be burned because combustion breaks the unique bond formed between the preservative solution and the wood. When this bond is destroyed, the components of the preservative can be released in the form of ash and particulates, which can be harmful if inhaled. It is completely proper and legal to send treated wood to a landfill.
No - pressure treated wood contains toxic chemicals added during the preserving process. When the wood is burned the toxic chemicals are released into the surrounding air. Breathing them is really bad for you.
Depends- some as "gas assist"- a woodburning fireplace with gas jets- you can use either. Some are gas only- never meant to burn wood. Which do you have?
Pressure treated wood can last up to 20 years or more and most pressured treated wood sold in stores such as Home Depot offer a limited lifetime warranty.
no. you must have a flue that properly vents to the outside. you will burn your house down if you try to start a wood fire in a vent free fireplace.
You have to, or the fire is going to burn way too hot and not last very long. Depends on the type of wood you use also.
In MOST cases, yes- if the wood has not been treated with preservative chemicals.
No, it is not safe to burn wood in a gas fireplace with a chimney designed for gas.
sand paper
I do.
Check with Martin for an owner's manual. Unless a fireplace is specifically rated as multi-fuel, a gas fireplace cannot safely burn wood.
its not suggested but it also depends on the varnish.
No, it is not safe to burn. It is toxic.
No - pressure treated wood contains toxic chemicals added during the preserving process. When the wood is burned the toxic chemicals are released into the surrounding air. Breathing them is really bad for you.
Yes.
Its wood isn't it
No. It's illegal.
yes