Spent the weekend building and filling a #SolarKiln ... which is a thing for rapidly drying firewood without any additional fuel.

In Scotland, it can take a year or more to season wood. The idea here is to accelerate that process by increasing the temperature.

It sounds very high-tech – and you can spend hundreds or thousands of pounds on these things. But I opted to build a low-cost alternative involving a 30 quid plastic greenhouse from #Lidl and 3 pallets we retrieved from neighbours who wanted shot of them anyway.

I knackered my back about a month ago loading pallets into our car. They were sodden, and weighed about 30kg each.

Anyway, I reckon the temperature in there will get up to ~35-40ºC this week, given our weather forecast.

I'll measure actual temperatures over the coming days and record them here.

Meanwhile, here's what the contraption looks like (trigger warning: it looks like a £30 Lidl greenhouse, 3 pallets, and half a tonne of wood.)

The wood slopes downward to the left because that's the south. So it should admit maximum sunlight and, as the wood contracts and settles, it should migrate northwards – where there is full-size support.

It's a #prototype, I suppose.We'll see how it goes.

The frame is tethered to the pallets and half a tonne of wood, and also guyed to the fence behind.

So it should withstand anything but the worst winter storm.

Worst thing that can happen is I have half a tonne of damp wood ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Day 1. Observed temperatures peaked at 22°C here.

Inside the woodstack the peak was 28°. That’s measured in the middle of the pile, 2 or 3 layers from the top. So well out of direct sunlight.

On the surface the temperature peaked at 39°C. Again I chose a spot out of direct sunlight.

Here's a graph of the data so far for today.

I am, obviously, not going to update this 24/7.

I *could* force the temperature higher by keeping the vents and door closed. But I need some ventilation to maintain airflow and give the moisture somewhere to go.

So the vents at the side are partially open, and the zippers either side of the door opened to the height of the pallets to draw air up and through it.

@iamdavidobrien what about getting a dehumidifier? or is there no plug

No power. It needs to do the job itself.

@guiltmanager