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I am building electric wire stripper and need help.

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    Quote Originally Posted by hills View Post
    Not terribly relevant but pellet stoves came up in another discussion and i thought about this post.

    It's hard to get the pellet recipe just right. Most kinds need a binder of some kind like corn starch and the moisture content has to be just right. You would have to tinker with the feed rate on the pellet stove auger for the type of pellet being used because different ones have different burn rates ?

    That got me to thinking. It might be easier to make compressed biomass bricks for a wood stove. You would still need to get moisture content and the binder right but rate of burn wouldn't be as much of a concern.

    Just look around your local environment to see what kinds of biomass are available ? Maybe sawdust from a local mill ? Maybe peat moss ? Maybe waste product from agriculture ? Maybe branches left over after cutting a tree ?
    I can get bales of cardboard for the taking.






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    hills is offline Metal Recycling Entrepreneur
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    Quote Originally Posted by alloy2 View Post
    I can get bales of cardboard for the taking.

    Ohh gawd ... that would do it. There's no lack of cardboard around these days. The bottom dropped out of the market a few years ago and you can hardly give it away. I used to bale that stuff on a regular basis. The only concern i would have would be the plastic tape and plastic stickers on the boxes. The residual glue that was originally applied to hold the boxes together could be an issue too. You wouldn't want those contaminants in your pellets.

    Maybe dissolve the cardboard in water to make a pulp and then run it through a screen to remove most of the contaminants. There must be an established method. The Chinese have been recycling cardboard and reusing the fibers for many years now.

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    Quote Originally Posted by hills View Post
    Ohh gawd ... that would do it. There's no lack of cardboard around these days. The bottom dropped out of the market a few years ago and you can hardly give it away. I used to bale that stuff on a regular basis. The only concern i would have would be the plastic tape and plastic stickers on the boxes. The residual glue that was originally applied to hold the boxes together could be an issue too. You wouldn't want those contaminants in your pellets.

    Maybe dissolve the cardboard in water to make a pulp and then run it through a screen to remove most of the contaminants. There must be an established method. The Chinese have been recycling cardboard and reusing the fibers for many years now.
    Binder

    Would not have thought about cardboard until you had mentioned other types of waste material, then the light came on. I see bales of this stuff coming into the landfills.

    Manufacture and Use of Cardboard Pellets in Inuvik, NT

    Last edited by Smf-retired-user-0043; 10-29-2021 at 08:38 PM.

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