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- Newsgroups: sci.environment
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!uucp.mr.med.ge.com!news.mr.med.ge.com!hinz
- From: hinz@picard.med.ge.com (David Hinz Mfg 4-6987 ~BHOSVWZ#097)
- Subject: Re: pollution from woodburning fireplace
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.104335.8089@mr.med.ge.com>
- Sender: news@mr.med.ge.com
- Nntp-Posting-Host: bonfire
- Organization: GE Medical Systems, Magnetic Resonance
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL6]
- References: <1hr11tINNilk@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu>
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 92 10:43:35 GMT
- Lines: 44
-
- Patricia Dedula (ad376@cleveland.Freenet.Edu) wrote:
-
- : My neighbor has a woodburning fireplace which he burns from
- : morning to night. It is polluting the air around my house to the
- : point where I ca
- : can hardly breathe when I am outside and it is getting into m
- : my house. Could anyone tell me what could be causing this
- : pollution. Could he be burning the wrong kind of wood? What
- : could my neighbor do to eliminate or cut down the strong smell
- : that his coming from his fireplace and surrounding my house.
- : I noticed even his chimney is getting black.
-
- I heat my house with wood almost exclusively (the 1940's oil
- burning furnace kicks on about once a week if I get lazy about
- the fire). I feel I can add something on this topic.
-
- I have found that good wood (oak or maple) has a quite pleasant smell,
- while if I burn "Garbage wood", in my case box elder, it stinks pretty
- badly. As I have 37 acres and there's little chance of my smoke reaching
- the neighbors, I don't worry too much about it.
-
- If he's burning soft wood, or PAPER? or pallett wood perhaps, that could
- explain it. Trash would be worse...
-
- The chimney getting black is fairly normal, as they say, soot happens.
-
- Are you on good terms with this neighbor? You could mention to him that
- wet/soft woods deposit lots of creosote in the chimney, causing a fire
- hazard, also if it's not a sealed fireplace unit he could be breathing
- those fumes as well.
-
- With good wood, a woodfire is quite pleasant smelling. My favorite is
- red oak, it is almost a perfume-incense smell.
-
- Anyway, I digress. How, ecologically, does woodburning compare to
- burning oil (in a ~60% efficient furnace)? It's cheaper for me (I have
- the trees), and I assume most of the emissions are particulate matter that
- will settle out?
-
- --
-
- Dave Hinz - Opinions expressed are mine, not my employer's. Obviously.
- Don't blame me; I voted for Perot! hinzd@picard.med.ge.com
- SAAB - Because you get what you pay for. Pherrets are Phun!!!
-