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These next few blogs will be about kiln drying lumber in your very own, easy to build, solar kiln.
This blog is an overview.
Solar kiln part 2 will be the interior of the kiln
Solar kiln part 3 will be about the operation of the kiln.
We can also give you a rough bill of materials if there is an interest.
I built mine 7 years ago, and other than some painting here and there, it is maintenance free, and still works great. Most of the materials can be found for free, or at low cost. The solar panels are nothing more than recycled sliding glass doors. I CAREFULLY took the frames off of them, leaving the two insulated glass sheets that are bonded together. Don't do it CAREFULLY, and you will end up playing 5 million pick up as this glass is tempered and breaks into the tiniest pieces if it gets upset at your poking and prodding.
I made my kiln 4 feet by 10 feet, but as long as you can find the glass, the size is practically unlimited. A standard ratio is 10 to 1. This means that for every square foot of glass you have, you can dry 10 board foot of lumber. My kiln ended up with 30 square foot of glass, so I can put 300 board feet of lumber in mine. I had planned on a larger kiln (500 bd ft), but I played 5 million pick-up with two of my glass panels, so we ended up with a smaller kiln.
Here is a picture of the front, below
The kiln is wedge shaped with the front angled at 45 degrees to capture as much southern sun as possible. Your kiln should have an unobstructed view of the southern sky. It's also a good idea to keep relatively close to an electric supply. I sure didn't. Mine is a couple hundred feet from my house! Good thing I like to dig because that was one long trench!
It is amazing how hot it gets in there. Today was partly cloudy and 70 degrees, but it was 93 degrees inside the kiln.
The back has some intake vents cut into the top, and an outflow vent cut into the bottom. The picture below is of the back:
The side looks as you would expect, a wedge. See below.
If you do a lot of woodworking, or have a large wood project upcoming, you should consider building a solar kiln. The mark-up on KD lumber is high. Top grade "green" red oak is .85 cents a board foot at the mill right now. "Green" cherry is only $1.56 a board foot for the same top grade! You could even get better pricing utilizing yard trees from a tree trimmer, maybe free! Thinking of hardwood flooring? I bought #1 common cherry at .55 cents a board foot. I dried some lumber for a guy that is milling it out for me, so my cost for solid cherry flooring is .55 cents a square foot, plus the scrap. Little to no cost in the drying as it was dried in this kiln!
Thanks for reading
Kevin Koski
Dry Kiln operator
Owner and OperatorCurlyMapleWood.com
www.curlymaplewood.com
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