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The temperture difference is from 20 to 30 degrees, with a max
of about 80 degrees.
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As I read it, he's saying delta T.
From ambient, if he has an 80 degree shop, that's 100-110 degrees with a max temp of 160 degrees.
If the difference were from the top of an iron stove, a lot higher temperature, but still 80 degrees max --difference--.
Not considering any fire hazard, but as far as the wood expansion -- wouldn't it make a difference if he only fired up the heater while he was in the shop? That would introduce some large temperature swings.
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From: "Mike Marlow" <[email protected]>
Newsgroups: rec.woodworking
References: <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <[email protected]> <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: What type of wood to use around a wood stove?
Date: Sat, 4 Nov 2006 04:44:49 -0500
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"Toller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
> >I did take a tempurture from the chimmey, that is where I got the
> > highest temp.
>
> You are missing the point; the temperature CAN get much higher than
normal.
> For instance, my chimney, about 3 feet up from the stove, is usually about
> 250 degrees. Once I foolishly loaded the stove up with kiln dried scraps
> and it went up to 500 degrees. I expect a chimney fire would take it even
> higher.
>
>
You're missing the point Toller. He is not seeing 250 degree temperatures
around his chimney. If he were, he could not stand to even be in the area.
He has taken readings and the highest he has seen is 80 degrees. It does
not matter what the flue temperature is - that is not what is been seen
radiated out. Yes - a chimney fire would result in higher temperatures. So
what? We don't build homes in anticipation of chimney fires, we operate to
prevent chimney fires. He did not ask if he could put a shelf 2" from his
stack, he asked about the risk of wood movement.
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
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From: "brianlanning" <[email protected]>
Newsgroups: rec.woodworking
Subject: Re: What type of wood to use around a wood stove?
Date: 3 Nov 2006 15:25:01 -0800
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bdeditch wrote:
> I want to put up a shelf on a wall that is close to a wood air tight
> heater. The temperture difference is from 20 to 30 degrees, with a max
> of about 80 degrees. I was going to use solid oak, but I am worried
> about the expansion and contraction of the wood. Can Oak plywood be
> used or is Poplar better? Also should I be concerned about what type of
> finish I put on it?
Generally, the expansion and contraction of wood is a function of
humidity (and therefore moisture content in the wood) rather than
temperature. Having said that, warming things up will drop the
relative humidity and probably dry out the wood more.
The hardwoods all have different amounts of expansion in the face of
differnt moisture contents. Plywood would be far more stable. I doubt
it will matter much though. Just design things correctly to allow for
wood movement and you should be fine no matter what you use.
I don't think any finish would have a problem standing up to 80 degrees
indoors.
brian