Product Details
Log Maker - The Original Green One

Log Maker - The Original Green One
From It Must Be Green

Price: £19.95

Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Dispatched from and sold by EcoHamster

2 new or used available from £19.95

Average customer review:

Product Description

An improved version of the new log maker. With easier to use plunger and clear step by step photographic instructions. Make your own fuel logs. These can be made with a combination of newspaper, paper junk mail, cardboard, wood chippings, dry leaves, sawdust, twigs etc etc. Easy to make and ready to burn immediately. Can be burnt on open fires, solid fuel and wood burning stoves. Good as a starter fuel - they should burn for up to an hour, depending on the contents of the log. Each log measures approximately: 20cm in length, 6cm in diameter.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #34179 in Kitchen & Housewares
  • Brand: Household

Features

  • An improved version of the new log maker
  • Make your own fuel logs
  • These can be made with a combination of newspaper, paper junk mail, cardboard, wood chippings, dry leaves, sawdust, twigs etc
  • Easy to make and ready to burn immediately
  • 20cm in length, 6cm in diameter

Customer Reviews

Does the job well5
I've had this log maker since early September. It works well with newspaper and "office" paper. It can need a fair bit of strength to compress and extract the plunger, and hands can get a bit sore after a long session of using it. Perhaps my technique needs to improve!

It's not so good with glossy magazines or light cardboard as this sort of material tends to cause the plunger to jam in the tube. I find you can include some of this sort of stuff with ordinary paper quite well though. I'm not sure that the logs would be OK for a fire for a whole day in an ordinary fireplace, they do make a lot of ash in comparison with real logs. I use them primarily as firelighters, 4 or 5 start the fire really well. That sort of quantity is manageable, I'm not sure that the process would be humanly sustainable for the sole supply of fuel for a household fire over an English winter.