Log burners, eco logs, briquettes for sale, heat logs,Devon - Environmentaly friendly heat logs. Tel 01598740197 North Devon




Testimonials

Here are just a few comments that some of our customers have kindly emailed to us.


We have been burning logs for many years. We had never heard of heat logs or hardwood briquettes that we have now moved onto. They are simply fantastic. We are not only saving money on fuel bills but we have now no need for kindling as these briquetes light on a simple fire lighter.

Paula
West Midlands

These briquettes that we purchase from demon briquettes are just miles above any other type we have ever used. They leave very little ash and are just so convenient in so many ways. We will never go back to burning logs again. Our wood burner drives 5 radiators and heats all our hot water.

Kind regards
Mrs Westkland

We have been using these heat logs all last winter and have found them brilliant. We can even keep our wood burner in over night and find our sitting room still warm in the morning

Many thanks
John Watford
Barnstaple

Our friends in Cornwall have just fitted a biomass boiler to their country home. This deals with all the central heating within their five bedroom house. I was simply amazed to see that their whole heating system was running on this carbon neutral fuel. I am a great believer in new environmentally friendly fuels to save our planet and this certainly seems to be one.

PeterJones
Salisbury

I run my wood burner only in the evening during the winter period. It was always so much trouble bring in logs and finding dry logs. Now a bag of these briquettes just sits by the fire and with a simple fire lighter the briquettes are burning within seconds.

John
North Molton

We have used briquettes in the past that we were not impressed with.
These hardwood briquettes or heat logs are realy very good. They just glow away giving out a very controled heat. We now are solely burning this fuel on our fires and purchase our supply atDeon briquettes discounted price during the summer period. Shame you guys dont produce more in the winter to keep up with demand!

James Deacon
Torrington

Wood burning stoves in modern day heating.

For an example of an environmentally sound, high efficiency technology with a promising future before of it, most people likely would not instantly consider the humble wood burner. This is, after all, an item that appears to have altered very little since its original development a couple of centuries back.
Yet concealed within its intentionally dated styling sits a highly effective, high combustion burner that can essentially match the average domestic gas boiler. Despite appearances, the wood burner has come a long way in recent years, mainly in response to stricter controls but also due to improved materials and design.
Yet strangely, while most people think nothing of lighting a gas flame, they hesitate when it comes to burning logs. Perhaps because the emissions are more visible with wood smoke and of course it’s quite clearly a dead tree. But the interesting thing is that although burning wood does release carbon dioxide, growing another tree will soak back up the same amount – hence there is no net CO2 gain.
When trees are used as a managed resource, there are as many planted as are felled – and of course there is always a sizable stock representing the stages from sapling to mature tree. The point being that each tree in this cycle locks up as much CO2 during its growth as it will release when burned (or indeed left to rot).
In other words, whatever is put into the air is always removed again by new growth – a balanced CO2 cycle. Compare this with conventional fossil fuels which cannot be replaced. Here the CO2 goes in only one direction – into the atmosphere.
Obviously, any technology that is both proven and beneficial in helping control carbon dioxide levels can expect a warm reception now and for the foreseeable future. And you can assume its popularity will only increase as time goes on.
So it’s easy to see how the future looks assured for the good old wood burning stove, with not a little help from both legislation intended to increase its appeal and the sheer number of people choosing to adopt it.
Being as it is also relatively cheap to run compared to typical gas and oil systems, wood burning clearly has great appeal to those people in a position to adopt it. It is not however any kind of magic pill for the many problems of the world. But the benefits are such that it has certainly reserved its place among the technologies of the future.

How do they last.

We have just purchased our first 20 bags of these eco logs. We are burning them on our clear view wood burner to heat our sitting room in the evenings. On average a single bag of briquettes will last us 3 nights at least. This has ment that for us it is cheaperthen buying logs and much more convenient. We will be purchasing our full winter stock at this companies special summer rate for next winter.

George Foster
Surrey

We have now had four different makes of woodburning stoves.Starting with a Hunter and now ending up with a woodwarm. Woodwarm stoves are by far the best stoves we have ever owned. This woodburner is just so easy to controle and the glass never becomes smokey with soot and tar because of the screen wash with air. We are now burning nothing but hardwood briquettes and simply find that a bag last for 4 to 5 evenings of heat. Our stove is 9 kw. The heat these briquettes give out is realy something else. They are clean,easy to store and very sensibly priced. I would always say to everyone thinking about burning any type wood fuel to buy the best wood burner. Wood burning stoves are all different and Woodwarm is by far the best we have ever used. Just add the briquettes and do away with useing damp old logs and you then have the perfect heating machine. 

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