Charcoal sawdust wood chips peat or paper used for fuel and kindling to start a fire the term derives from the french word brique meaning brick.
Charcoal briquettes in wood stove.
Coal burns much hotter than wood so coal based products can damage a wood burning stove.
Briquettes are made from raw charcoal that s mixed with binding materials to make the familiar bricks.
A stove as in claim 3 wherein the grate includes a perforated web for supporting thereon charcoal briquettes being combusted and wherein said grate web is provided with a plurality of air flow apertures therethrough arranged with the air flow aperture of largest area located in the center of the web and with openings of decreasing area size.
In fact wood briquettes are generally better for wood burning stoves than logs are.
Charcoal briquettes make a convenient and reliable choice.
They re inexpensive and easy to get burning evenly especially if you use a charcoal starter.
Wood burning stoves are not designed to burn as hot as multi fuel stoves ones which can burn either wood or coal.
Wood briquettes generally have a water content moisture content of under 10.
Also spelled briquet is a compressed block of coal dust or other combustible biomass material e g.
Most high quality briquettes are dried down to under 6.
Wood briquettes burn hotter than logs but as not as hot as coal so they are perfectly safe in either a wood burning stove or a multi fuel stove.