1995ToyotaCorolla,
@1995ToyotaCorolla@lemmy.world avatar

I don’t think I’ve ever seen coal burn, but you can find pieces of it along the abandoned railways and beaches in my area. We have a coal dock that’s been abandoned for 50 years and the ground is still black with coal dust

Edit: actually a scenic railroad in my area still has a coal fired steam locomotive so yes, I can say I’ve seen coal burn!

OneCardboardBox,

As a child, Easter holiday in a cottage in Cornwall. It had a coal fireplace.

joe_archer,

I have open fires in my house, it was built in the 1840s so yes.

This is very common in the uk, though in many places smokeless replacements for coal are legally required.

Hikermick,

A friend of mine bought a literal ton of coal for $75 to heat his pole barn in a wood burner that could also be used to burn coal. His chimney wasn’t tall enough and wind would drag the smoke down to ground level as it passed over the gambrel roof. It was nasty. I believe later on I learned that coal from my region is of poor quality and gets sent overseas

Turbofish,

I’d never really considered that people might not have seen coal burn.

In Ireland both coal and turf are still fairly common as the primary method of heating. That said they are “trying” to phase it out.

someguy3,

Since we produce a lot of NG around here that’s what we use for heating. But we always used electric clothes dryers…

Deceptichum,
Deceptichum avatar

Isn’t the burning of bog utterly wrecking parts of your ecosystem? I’m really surprised youse are still doing it in this day an age.

Chainweasel,

Yeah, I grew up in a poor area in rural Ohio and we heated primary with coal until 2021.

ace_garp,
@ace_garp@lemmy.world avatar

Yes, in 1989.

East Perth to Midland train yards on the footplate of the Flying Scotsman.

The fireman was shovelling coal into the firebox, and it was one of the most concentrated sources of heat I have seen in my life.

Boingboing,

Well yeah. It was how we heated our home when I was a kid growing up in England.

Aggravationstation,

Same here

dfi,

Here in New Zealand you can buy it at the Hardware store in 20KG bags. Older houses have pot belly “stoves” for heat, which are smaller then log burners usually, and coal is the best fuel for them.

Dieinahole,

Yep, I dabble in blacksmithing.

You get it going -smokey as shit at first-and it melts together into a lighter, more solid piece that burns hotter and cleaner. That's called coke.

Then you toss your irons in

Rocketpoweredgorilla,
@Rocketpoweredgorilla@lemmy.ca avatar

Yes. Used to build and install coal boilers for hot water heating systems.

Jaybob32,

Yes. On a camping trip. At one end of the lake is the remains of an old WWII POW camp. There were at the time some small piles of coal. We took a couple of pieces and burned it in a camp fire. Only because I had never seen coal burn before.

perplexity.ai/…/White-otter-Lake-lnJZ4ycdSKOAmJ2U…

kaffiene,

Yes. In a fire. Why?

thedeadwalking4242,

I lived in wv, you find chunks of it out in the ground sometimes. I was a curious kid and tried to get some to light. It was real low quality though so it burnt like shit

tiredofsametab,

Yep. When I was young, we had a stove in my house for heat that burnt coal or wood. We mostly burnt coal in it.

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