Olive FireWood in Standard Wooden Cage with Dried Hardwood Logs 10-20% Moisture BEST PRICE
The Olive tree – Olive FireWood, native to the middle east, was introduced into the Iberian peninsula by the Greeks and Phoenicians who planted it in their colonies
OLIVE FireWood Standard Crate Sizes : 0.83 m (h) x 1.20 m (w) x 1.00 m (d) – Loose Volume: 1.10 m3.
Pallet weight approx. 420-440 kgs each
- Firewood price list
No. | Product | Quantity in a Load (40’HC Container) | Price per unit | Price per whole load ex works Burgas, Bulgaria |
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1 | FIREWOOD ON LARGE PALLET BOXES | 63 m3
21 pallets x 2m3 + 21 pallets x 1m3 |
69 EUR per m3
M3 = 420-440 kgs |
4 347 EUR | ||
2 | FIREWOOD ON HIGH PALLET BOXES + FIREWOOD IN BAGS LOADED OVER THE BOXES | – 26 pallet boxes x 2m3 + 6 tons of bagged firewood over them loaded | 69 EUR per m3 pallet boxes ; 145 EUR per ton for the bags | 4 458 EUR | ||
3 | FIREWOOD IN BAGS ON PALLETS | 66 m3
52 pallets x 1.27 m3 |
73 EUR per m3
M3 = 420-440 kgs |
4 818 EUR | ||
4 | FIREWOOD IN NET BAGS WITHOUT PALLETS | 27 tons
1800 bags x 15 kgs Or 2700 bags x 10 kgs |
145 EUR per ton | 3 915 EUR | ||
5 | FIREWOOD CUT AND SPLIT BULK LOADED | 27 tons | 125 EUR per ton | 3 375 EUR | ||
6 | FIREWOOD IN BIG BAGS | 27 tons | 139 EUR per ton | 3915 EUR | ||
7 | KINDLINGS ON PALLETS | 66 m3
52 pallets x 1.27 m3 |
99 EUR per m3
80 bags x 4-5 kgs |
6 534 EUR | ||
8 | KINDLIGS IN BAGS WITHOUT PALLETS | 5400 bags x 4-5 kgs | 1.15 EUR per bag | 6 210 EUR |
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Total is 63 x 69 EUR = 4 347 EUR
Log Length: 25cm is our standard – Tolerance on lengths +/- 8%. If required they can be: 20 cm, 33 cm , 40 cm , 50 cm , 100 cm
Log Diameter: is our standard 12 -15cm measured across widest point of log. Tolerance on diameter +/- 10%
If required, they can be split : For stoves: 7-15cm ; Мedium: 10-15cm ; For fireplaces 15-20 cm ; or max large – over 20 cm
The Olive FireWood is Dried
Moisture Content: Average 10-20%
Brash Volume: Max 4% per crate (brash constitutes bark and smaller pieces)
Normal delivery Time: 5-8 working days
Olive FireWood
Olive FireWood is widely used for burning in the fireplace. It is a slow-burning wood that lights up relatively easily and is used to keep the fire burning for longer. We can use the twigs derived from the pruning as tinder and add parts of the root, the branches, or the trunk of the tree.
Orders:
The Olive FireWood in Standard Crate with Dried Hardwood Logs 10-20% Moisture can be loaded in a 40 feet High Cube Container – 21 Standard Crates and 21 Large Crates – Totally: 63 cubic meters
High Cube Container Sizes and Specifications:
Dimensions of 40ft HC container | |
Internal length | 12.031 m / 39.5 ft |
Internal width | 2.352 m / 7.8 ft |
Internal height | 2.698 m / 8.9 ft |
Tare weight | 3,940 kg / 8,687 lbs |
Payload capacity | 30,480 kg |
Cubic capacity | 76.3 m3 / 2,694.5 cu ft |
We need your company identifications as name , address, VAT number so we can issue invoice proforma and proceed with supplying you with our DRIED Firewood .
– fumigation / disinfection with gaz : 130 eur/ 40′ container
– T2L form doc (not invoice T2L) on;y for EU supplies- 100 eur/ container
More about Olive FireWood
Olive FireWood is excellent firewood due to its high heat production and sweet smell, but its low availability makes it expensive and generates a lot of smoke.
Olive wood has many great things going for it as firewood. With its relatively high BTU rating, olive wood burns hot. It also has a very sweet smell, making it an ideal choice for use in outdoor fire pits. However, its relative scarcity in the United States and its cost make it less-than-perfect for your sole firewood source.
Olive tends to be a very dense wood, which makes it excellent as firewood. It burns long and hot, as seen from its high BTU rating (which is just behind that of oak) and its weight. Olive wood has a lot of oil in it, which leads to its long seasoning time. It’s also sometimes used to smoke meat. The biggest stumbling block to using olive wood for firewood is its price and low tree-to-firewood ratio. Since olive trees don’t grow very large, you’ll have to cut down several of them to get the wood you need.
Olive FireWood burns at a pretty high temperature, clocking in at 27 million BTU per cord. Oak, a popular hardwood for firewood, burns at 28 million BTU per cord, so olive wood isn’t far behind in heat production. Due to the high oil content in olive wood, it’s recommended to keep your fires smaller to start until you get a feel for how it burns in your stove or firepit.
Smoke GenerationOlive FireWood doesn’t have a high sap content like other hardwoods, so the smoke won’t be as bad. However, the high level of oils in olive wood means that it will produce more smoke than oak, for example. Olive wood is used for smoking meat, so it will generate a decent amount of smoke. Any smoke generated has a pleasant, sweet smell, emblematic of olive wood.
You shouldn’t burn olive firewood indoors unless you have sufficient ventilation to prevent smoke from filling your home.
Burning Smell
If you ask anyone how Olive FireWood smells as it burns, the universal response seems to be that it has a very pleasant, sweet aroma. This is likely due to the high oil content in olive wood. The greener olive wood is when it burns, the more pungent the sweet aroma is likely to be. Even when properly seasoned, olive wood still has a very pleasant, sweet smell.
Olive wood is great firewood that produces a clean, bright flame with a wonderful aroma. However, its high cost and low availability mean that it’s tough to get your hands on it.
Firewood | Million BTU/Cord (source) | Ease of Splitting | Coals | Overall Quality |
Osage orange | 32 | Easy | Excellent | Excellent |
Olive wood | 27 | Easy | Excellent | Excellent |
Maple | 25 | Easy | Excellent | Excellent |
Bur oak | 26 | Easy | Good | Excellent |
Again, olive wood isn’t an easy wood to find. However, as you can see, it’s right up there with Our Store and oak as wonderful firewood. Most people, however, choose to use it for cooking and stick with other woods as a firewood source.
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More about Dried FireWood in Net Bags.
Large Crates Dried FireWood is used for home consumtion of died firewood and the Firewood on pallet boxes can easily be moved by forklift.
Dried FireWood in Net Bags are used mostly in homes and are usually sold in a Big Markets like Metro, Gas stations , etc.
Type of wood – whether it is hardwood or softwood – burned in the combustion process is important for the heat value and the energy efficiency.
Hardwoods have less resin and burn slower and longer. Softwoods burn quickly. In addition the seasoned length influences on the fuel efficiency. Seasoning the wood refers to the allowed drying time before combustion.
Wood need to be dried at least 4 to 6 months before use. Our wood is dried at least 10-12 months.
Densities and heat values of some common wood species are indicated in the table below. Note that the volume of a stack of firewood varies considerably on whether or not it is split and how it is stacked. The moisture content also play a role – the values below are based on a average moisture content of 20%.
Wood Species | Density of Dry Wood (lb/ft3) |
Weight of Dry Cord (lb/cord) |
Recoverable Heat Value of Cord (Dry Wood) (millions Btu/cord) |
Heat Value of Cord (Green Wood) (millions Btu/cord) |
Units of Green Wood needed to produce 1 Million (cord/Btu’s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Apple | 48.7 | 4100 | 26.5 | 18.6 | 0.054 |
Ash, white | 22.3 | ||||
Aspen | 27 | 2290 | 14.7 | 10.3 | 0.097 |
Men’s Balm | 26.3 | 2240 | 14.3 | 10.0 | 0.10 |
Basswood | 24.8 | 2110 | 13.5 | 9.5 | 0.106 |
Beech | 44.2 | 3760 | 24 | 16.8 | 0.060 |
Birch | 21.7 | ||||
Black Ash | 35.2 | 2990 | 19.1 | 13.4 | 0.075 |
Black Spruce | 29.2 | 2480 | 15.9 | 11.1 | 0.090 |
Box elder | 32.9 | 2800 | 17.9 | 12.5 | 0.080 |
Buckeye | 13.4 | ||||
Butternut | 15.4 | ||||
Catalpa | 16.4 | ||||
Cherry | 36.7 | 3120 | 20 | 14 | 0.071 |
Chestnut | 12.9 | ||||
Coffee tree | 21.6 | ||||
Cottonwood | 24.8 | 2110 | 13.5 | 9.5 | 0.106 |
Dogwood | 27.0 | ||||
Douglas Fir | 26.4 | ||||
East Hop hornbeam | 50.2 | 4270 | 27.3 | 19.1 | 0.052 |
Elm | 35.9 | 3050 | 19.5 | 13.7 | 0.073 |
Hackberry | 38.2 | 3250 | 20.8 | 14.6 | 0.069 |
Hemlock | 29.2 | 2480 | 15.9 | 11.1 | 0.090 |
Hickory | 50.9 | 4330 | 27.7 | 19.4 | 0.052 |
Ironwood | 26.0 | ||||
Jack Pine | 31.4 | 2670 | 17.1 | 12.0 | 0.084 |
Larch – Eastern | 18.7 | ||||
Locust | 27.3 | ||||
Lodgepole pine | 19.3 | ||||
Maple | 21.6 | ||||
Mulberry | 25.8 | ||||
Norway Pine | 31.4 | 2670 | 17.1 | 12.0 | 0.084 |
Osage Orange | 32.9 | ||||
Paper Birch | 37.4 | 3180 | 20.3 | 14.2 | 0.070 |
Pinon Pine | 33.5 | ||||
Ponderosa Pine | 28 | 2380 | 15.2 | 10.6 | 0.094 |
Redcedar – east | 19.8 | ||||
Red Oak | 44.2 | 3760 | 24 | 16.8 | 0.060 |
Red Maple | 34.4 | 2920 | 18.7 | 13.1 | 0.076 |
Spruce | 16.0 | ||||
Sucamore | 19.5 | ||||
Sugar Maple | 44.2 | 3760 | 24 | 16.8 | 0.060 |
Tamarack | 38.2 | 3250 | 20.8 | 14.6 | 0.069 |
Tanarack pine | 21.2 | ||||
Yellow Birch | 43.4 | 3690 | 23.6 | 16.5 | 0.061 |
Yellow pine | 22.0 | ||||
Walnut – black | 21.5 | ||||
White Ash | 43.4 | 3690 | 23.6 | 16.5 | 0.061 |
White Oak | 47.2 | 4010 | 25.7 | 18.0 | 0.056 |
White Pine | 26.3 | 2240 | 14.3 | 10.0 | 0.100 |
Willow | 13.2 |
- 1 ft (foot) = 0.3048 m
- 1 lb = 0.4536 kg
- 1 lb/ft 3 = 16.018 kg/m 3
- 1 Btu (British thermal unit) = 1,055.06 J = 107.6 kpm = 2.931×10 -4 kWh = 0.252 kcal = 778.16 ft lb f = 1.055×10 10 ergs = 252 cal = 0.293 watt hour
Note that in the table above 1 net cord volume = 85 ft3 is used to convert between the “Density” and “Weight of Cord” column (1 stacked cord volume = 128 ft3). Be aware that the densities used for the wood species varies significantly. The densities used above is for natural dried wood where the average moisture content is approximately 20%.
Heat values of cords with dry wood can be estimated by adding 10% to the green wood cords values.
Recoverable heat values are calculated with a stove efficiency of approximately 65%.
How to Calculate the Combustion Heat in MJ/kg from the Table above
- calculate “Density of Dry Wood” in kg/m3 by multiplying lb/ft3 with 16.018
- calculate “Weight of Dry Wood” in kg/cord by multiplying lb/cord with 0.4536
- calculate “Recoverable Heat Value of Cord (Dry Wood)” in MJ/cord by multiplying Millions Btu/cord with 1055.06
- calculate “Recoverable Heat Value per kg (Dry Wood)” in MJ/kg by dividing 3 with 2
Example – Red Oak
- “Density of Dry Wood” : 44.2 (lb/ft3) 16.018 = = 708 (kg/m3)
- “Weight of Dry Wood” : 3760 (lb/cord) 0.4536 = 1705.5 (kg/cord)
- “Recoverable Heat Value of Cord (Dry Wood)” : 24.0 (Millions Btu/cord) 1055.06 = 25304 (MJ/cord)
- “Recoverable Heat Value per kg (Dry Wood)” : 25304 (MJ/cord) / 1705.5 (kg/cord) = 14.8 (MJ/kg)
The Combustion Process of Burning Wood
- Wood heats up to approximately 212 oF (100 oC) evaporating the moisture in it. There is no heating from the wood at this point
- Wood solids starts to break down converting the fuel gases (near 575 oF, 300 oC)
- From 575 oF to 1100 oF (300 – 600 oC ) the main energy in the wood is released when fuel vapors containing 40% to 60% of the energy burn
- After the burning of fuel vapors and the moisture is evaporated, only charcoal remains burning at temperatures higher than 1100o F
- TC = 5 / 9 (TF – 32)
Net calorific value (CV) or Lower Heating Value (LHV) given for all fuels. This means that the latent heat of vaporization of the water vapour created by combustion is not recovered by condensation
Fuel | Net CV by mass | Bulk density | Energy density by volume | ||
GJ/tonne | kWh/kg | kg/ m3 | MJ/ m3 | kWh/m 3 | |
Wood chips (30% MC) | 12.5 | 3.5 | 250 | 3,100 | 870 |
Log wood (stacked – air dry: 20% MC) | 14.7 | 4.1 | 350-500 | 5,200-7,400 | 1,400-2,000 |
Wood (solid – oven dry) | 19 | 5.3 | 400-600 | 7,600-11,400 | 2,100-3,200 |
Wood pellets (10% MC) | 17 | 4.8 | 650 | 11,000 | 3,100 |
Miscanthus (bale – 25% MC) | 13 | 3.6 | 140-180 | 1,800-2,300 | 500-650 |
House coal | 27-31 | 7.5-8.6 | 850 | 23,000-26,000 | 6,400-7,300 |
Anthracite | 33 | 9.2 | 1,100 | 36,300 | 10,100 |
Heating oil | 42.5 | 11.8 | 845 | 36,000 | 10,000 |
Natural gas (NTP) | 38.1 | 10.6 | 0.9 | 35.2 | 9.8 |
LPG | 46.3 | 12.9 | 510 | 23,600 | 6,600 |
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עצי הסקה זיתים בכלוב עץ סטנדרטי עם בולי עץ יבשים 10-20% לחות המחיר הטוב ביותר
עצי הסקה זיתים בכלוב עץ סטנדרטי עם בולי עץ יבשים 10-20% לחות המחיר הטוב ביותר
Ivan Stoyanov |
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Smith |
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GALLIL |
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SUMMARY
עצי הסקה זיתים בכלוב עץ סטנדרטי עם בולי עץ יבשים 10-20% לחות המחיר הטוב ביותר |
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tlovertonet –
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