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Willow - No not the film


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#1 hewettn

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Posted 27 July 2003 - 04:14 PM

1 can source some willow from the local garden center they have 4 types:

"Browns" - Dried with the Bark On

"Whites" - Sprouted, Bark stripped and then dried.

"Buffs" - Boiled, Bark stripped and then dried.

"Blacks" - Steamed and then dried with the Bark On

I would gather to make willow charcoal i would need whites as these have the bark stripped ( saves me ) would this be correct ? as i would then only have to chop up to fit into my kiln (coffee tin)

Thanks

Nigel

#2 adamw

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Posted 27 July 2003 - 08:27 PM

Sounds interesting. It would be helpful to have the bark removed. I dont know what 'boiling' will do to the wood in terms of making good charcoal. It could maybe remove or alter the 'volatiles' that are needed for good pyro charcoal.

#3 Guest_skinhead_88_*

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Posted 28 July 2003 - 05:03 PM

i thought that the volatiles were the flammable gasses released while the wood is heated in the tin

#4 Richard H

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Posted 28 July 2003 - 05:05 PM

They are...A volatile substance is one which easily sublimes into a gas. Hence boiling or heating might drive out volatile substances in the wood - this is bad for pyro charcoal.

#5 hewettn

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Posted 28 July 2003 - 05:18 PM

Originally posted by Richard H
They are...A volatile substance is one which easily sublimes into a gas. Hence boiling or heating might drive out volatile substances in the wood - this is bad for pyro charcoal.


aren't you heating it to make the charcoal ?

#6 Richard H

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Posted 28 July 2003 - 05:27 PM

Yes, but you dont want to remove them all. That is why homemade charcoal often performs better than commercial bbq charcoal.

#7 hewettn

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Posted 28 July 2003 - 05:41 PM

is pussy willow recommended or should it be one of the others black willow - white willow etc?




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