Tree to Firewood Calculator (Cord, Weight, Logs)

Tree to Firewood Calculator

Turn one standing tree estimate into cords, stack volume, split log count, and seasoned carry weight.

🪵 Project Presets

📏 Tree and Processing Inputs

📊 Yield Results

Net Firewood Volume
0.00
cu ft | 0.00 m³
Full Cord Equivalent
0.00
face cords: 0.00
Estimated Split Logs
0
rows (4×8): 0.00
Seasoned Carry Weight
0
lb | 0 kg

🧱 Species Weight and Energy Grid

57
Red Oak lb/ft³
58
White Oak lb/ft³
55
Sugar Maple lb/ft³
52
Yellow Birch lb/ft³
49
White Ash lb/ft³
60
Hickory lb/ft³
56
Beech lb/ft³
35
White Pine lb/ft³

📋 Reference Tables

Species Green lb/ft³ MMBTU / cord Drying pace Burn profile
Red Oak5724.6SlowLong/high heat
White Oak5825.7SlowVery long coals
Sugar Maple5524.0MediumSteady clean heat
Yellow Birch5220.2MediumQuick startup
White Ash4923.6Medium-fastEasy to split
Shagbark Hickory6027.7SlowMaximum heat
American Beech5624.0Medium-slowDense long burn
White Pine3515.9FastQuick flames
Tulip Poplar3413.8FastLight shoulder fuel
DBH (in) Usable Height (ft) Taper 78% Volume (cu ft) Full Cords
1228Typical46.30.36
1432Typical67.00.52
1634Typical99.60.78
1838Typical139.31.09
2040Typical180.31.41
2244Typical231.51.81
2446Typical294.52.30
Stack Type Volume Block Wood Factor Solid Wood (cu ft) Use Case
Loose tossed128 cu ft0.6583.2Short-term staging
Rack stacked128 cu ft0.7292.2Most wood yards
Tight hand stack128 cu ft0.80102.4Storage optimized
Face cord (16 in)42.7 cu ft0.7230.7Retail reference
4×8 row (14 in)37.3 cu ft0.7226.9Short firebox
4×8 row (18 in)48.0 cu ft0.7234.6Long firebox
Moisture Drop Green to Seasoned Weight Change Handling Impact Typical Time
18%Mild drydownLight reductionSmall carry gain6-9 months
22%Seasoned targetModerate dropEasier loading9-14 months
28%Wet to usableMajor dropNoticeably lighter12-18 months
35%Fresh cut baselineLargest dropHeavy handling relief18+ months

Processing Comparison Grid

Manual Splitter

Cycle Rate35 logs/hr
Best DBH10-16 in
Crew1 person
FuelNone

Electric 6 Ton

Cycle Rate55 logs/hr
Best DBH8-18 in
Crew1 person
Fuel120V power

Gas 22 Ton

Cycle Rate95 logs/hr
Best DBH12-26 in
Crew1-2 people
FuelGasoline

Skid Steer Cone

Cycle Rate140 logs/hr
Best DBH16-30 in
Crew2 people
FuelDiesel rig
Tip: Measure usable trunk height after major forks. Excluding unusable stem sections improves yield accuracy more than tweaking taper by one or two percentage points.
Tip: When planning winter inventory, keep reserve at 10% to 15%. That buffer covers split shrinkage, odd rounds, and handling waste without running short late season.

Choosing good firewood a lot helps for fires in nature. Various kinds of wood burn in different speeds. They give different amounts of smoke and have various smells.

During research of wood, dryness must be the main issue. The drier the wood, the more well it operates. Well-seasoned wood commonly has dark finishes with clear cracks.

How to Choose Good Firewood for Campfires

If you hear steam bubble or hiss outside the end grain during warming, then it is still wet or green. Such wood requires to dry more long before usage. Split and dry wood lights itself very easily.

If you must use starter log, probably the wood is poor quality. Fat wood can serve as starter.

Many trees answer for fires. In Northern Virginia oak stays classic for burn. It is faithfully operate.

White oak gives strong heat. Red oak heats well, but burn slowly and smells bad. Trees as maple, especially sugar and red varieties, well serve.

Big Leaf Maple, alder, ash, locust, walnut and dogwood all burn well. Fruit trees also deserve attention. Black locust favorated because of its density and long combustion.

Eucalyptus trees heat strongly and during long time. White ash weigh less than other good timbers and cracks easily into logs. Birch burns warm and crack nice.

Yellow and black birch impresses. White birch burns quickly and well lights.

Softwoods as pine, fir and spruce light quickly. They answer for light, but consume themselves soon and too warm, so you must add commonly. Because of their sap they create more creosote.

Cedar well lights, because it lights easily and burn quickly. It smells nicely and chases natural insects. Some trees, as yew, you should escape.

During camping more well buy wood beside the fire location. Transportation can propagate pests and tree diseases. In many areas do not allow to move wood between districts or from other state.

Local timbers protect the forests. You finds them at campground stores. Many buy dried wood in plastic bags at large chain stores.

Driving by means of motorhome, space lacks, so folks commonly choose wood at the place.

Tree to Firewood Calculator (Cord, Weight, Logs)

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