jonny round boy
Member
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2007
- Messages
- 3,227
We have recently had a multifuel stove installed, and have got some logs off a friend who does gardening/tree pruning & felling.
They don't seem to burn too well, and I'm wondering if the moisture content is still too high. I don't have a moisture meter, and don't want to buy one as I wouldn't use it enough to justify it.
All moisture meters I've seen just have two metal probes at a set distance apart, and I'm assuming they measure the resistance between those two points? If that's the case, I have a multimeter that can measure resistance - could I use this?
If I set the probes at a fixed distance, is there a way of converting the resistance measured into a measurement for moisture content?
They don't seem to burn too well, and I'm wondering if the moisture content is still too high. I don't have a moisture meter, and don't want to buy one as I wouldn't use it enough to justify it.
All moisture meters I've seen just have two metal probes at a set distance apart, and I'm assuming they measure the resistance between those two points? If that's the case, I have a multimeter that can measure resistance - could I use this?
If I set the probes at a fixed distance, is there a way of converting the resistance measured into a measurement for moisture content?