Header: Header: Header:

Spruce Products Ltd. Goes With Valutec TC Continuous Kiln

At a time when low-cost mass production solutions are the norm, it’s worth remembering why custom products from specialized companies will always have their place. When sawmill plant manager Rod Pidskalny and the team at Spruce Products Ltd. (SPL) in Swan River, Manitoba, Canada, went looking to replace two aging batch kilns they were keen to explore continuous dry kiln technology. 

The SPL team soon ruled out traditional CDKs without door closures, fearing they would lose efficiency. Six months of designing a solution with Valutec landed them with a stainless steel TC continuous kiln with eight drying zones that can handle 60MMBF annually—well over their mill’s current demands. “We can now dry everything we can produce, plus we’ve got capacity built in with the kilns to dry a little more. We have some future expansion possible,” Pidskalny says, adding, “It’s been performing very well. We were looking for a 2.5% uplift in grade outturn, that was our goal, and we’ve actually met that. We think it’s a little higher than that.”

Beyond grade outturn, Pidskalny says they’ve noticed a significant decrease in drying defects, which has directly benefited their planer operations. They’ve seen fewer planer jams, cross-ups at the lug loader and generally smoother runs, particularly with 2x4s.

Valutec is the only company offering TC kiln—a kiln type that comes with distinguishing features such as low energy consumption, high flexibility and superior capacity. It gives the operator the possibility to create the ultimate drying process with freedom to mix dimensions, minimal moisture content variation and reduced risk of checking. Annual capacity can reach 150MMBF with target moisture contents down to around 12-18% with a standard deviation of 1%. The principle is based on the timber package being fed lengthwise through zones in which the air circulates laterally across the drying channel. This enables the separate regulation of the climate in different zones according to a schedule that comes very close to the ideal schedule of a batch kiln.

ICT was originally established in 1978 as an offshoot of the Langdale Co., but has since expanded and diversified to become a regional leader in cutting solutions.

Latest News

Lucidyne Transverse Scanner

Microtec’s recent acquisition of Lucidyne creates a significant global lumber scanning portfolio. Microtec has demonstrated success across a range of scanning solutions and Lucidyne’s GradeScan is a gold standard for lineal scanning….

Housing Starts Finish Year With A Bang

U.S. housing starts, thanks to the single-family market, finished 2020 on a surge, with December housing starts at a seasonally adjusted rate of 1.669 million, a 5.8% increase over November and 5.2% increase compared to December…

Major Mill Announcements Come From Across The U.S.

Biewer Plans For Second SYP Greenfield Mill: Biewer Lumber is constructing its second greenfield southern yellow pine sawmill in Mississippi, this one in Winona, about 100 miles north of its first one in Newton, and…

Familiar Face Behind Peak Renewables

Peak Renewables reports it is building a 600,000 tonne per year industrial wood pellet facility in Fort Nelson, British Columbia. Fort Nelson First Nation will reportedly have equity in the plant, which is anticipated to be in…

Find Us On Social

Newsletter

The monthly Timber Processing Industry Newsletter reaches over 4,000 mill owners and supervisors.

 

Subscribe/Renew

Timber Processing is delivered 10 times per year to subscribers who represent sawmill ownership, management and supervisory personnel and corporate executives. Subscriptions are FREE to qualified individuals.

Advertise

Complete the online form so we can direct you to the appropriate Sales Representative.