1. Home /
  2. Home improvement /
  3. Three Lakes Solutions


Category

General Information

Locality: Princeton, British Columbia

Phone: +1 250-295-2214



Address: 24 hour Emergency Service Princeton, BC, Canada

Website: www.threelakes.ca

Likes: 36

Reviews

Add review



Facebook Blog

Three Lakes Solutions 23.11.2020

Another chimney fire.

Three Lakes Solutions 13.11.2020

Health Canada is warning Canadians to immediately stop using certain natural gas and propane fireplaces made by Security Fireplace in the 1990s due to a risk of exploding glass. http://glbn.ca/FJ3Q1F

Three Lakes Solutions 05.11.2020

Give us a call, and make sure your family and home are safe during the heavy burning season. This does happen, don't let it happen to you.

Three Lakes Solutions 03.11.2020

http://www.goodshomedesign.com/firewood-comparison-chart/

Three Lakes Solutions 14.10.2020

Do you burn firewood? Here is a list of best-burning wood to use as well as firewood tips. Did you know that one cord of wood burned as firewood provides the heat equivalent to that produced by burning 200 to 250 gallons of heating oil, depending on the type of hardwood you are using? Here is a list of hardwoods in descending order of heat value: Elm, rock... Hickory, shagbark Oak, white Hickory, butternut Beech Oak, red Birch, yellow Elm, red Ash, white Elm, white Mesquite Hop hornbeam Locust, black Freshly cut wood contains up to 50 percent moisture and must be seasoned to 20 to 25 percent moisture content before burning. Wood containing more than 25 percent moisture is wet, or green, and should never be burned in a fireplace or wood stove. Wet wood is easier to split than dry wood. Wood must be split into pieces and stacked out of the rain for at least six months to season properly. If steam bubbles and hisses out of the end grain as the firewood heats up on the fire, the wood is wet, or green, and needs to be seasoned longer before burning. Well-seasoned firewood generally has darkened ends with visible cracks or splits. It is relatively lightweight and makes a sharp, distinctive clink when two pieces strike each other. Limit the amount of pine you burn. It's a resinous softwood.