There are also differences between wood and wood. Compact, heavy, light, soft, sweet... In woods too. And when she gets furious? It is said that the pot is tested on fire, but the wood that will make that fire will also test it.
An American friend has sent me the measure of the calorific strength of the wood they use in the kitchen. The distribution of logs above gasoline is three levels.
A firewood stereo in the first block gives as much heat as gasoline, which ranges from 210 to 260 liters. These are the American beech (Fagus grandiflora), the apple tree (Malus x domestica), the oak or red oak (Quercus rubra), the white walnut (Carya ovata), the sugary maple (Acer saccharum), the American ash (American Fraxinus), the white oak (Aliensis yellow) and the oak.
A stereo of the second group warms up as gasoline between 160 and 210 liters: the American elm (American Ulmus), the black cherry (Prunus serotina), the Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii), the red maple (Acer rubrum), the silver astigar (Acer saccharinum), the Latin paper.
The wood in the third group generates a quantity of petrol of between 105 and 155 litres, of which the American chickpea (Populus tremuloides), the American poplar (Populus deltoides), the tsuga canadensis (Tsuga Canadensis), the dried pine (Pinus contorta), the red aliso (Alnus rubra), the Redwoods (Habpadoya)
Before the end of the winter, see if I find the energy value of the woods in our surroundings...