Our Products
SUPERIOR WOOD PRODUCTS LLC.
Superior Wood Products supplies both
6mm (1/4 dia.) and 8mm (3/8 dia.) wood
pellets.
We supply both fuel pellets and animal
bedding pellets.

We can handle your shipping for you or
you can arrange your own shipping.

We ship one ton pallets composed of 50
each 40lb. Bags. The pallets are shrink
wrapped for stable easy handling.

We offer large tote sacks in 1000lb and
2000lb weights. These totes have a
convenient bottom 14" diameter chute to
empty from the bottom or you can scoop
out the pellets from the top opening.

For our commercial orders we offer  bulk
pellets in easy unloading end dump trailers
or walking floor trailers

  • Premium wood fuel pellets  

  • Equine Bedding  Bulk fuel pellets

  • Kitty Litter

Wood pellets fuel is a limitless and
environment friendly fuel source. It is a
clean-burning and a cost stable home
heating alternative. Burning wood pellets is
a good way to divert millions of tons of
waste timber wood and turn it into fuel
energy. Their free-flowing characteristics
make the pellets easy to handle and ideal
for automatic heating systems. Unlike the
traditional fossil fuel, wood pellet fuel is
renewable and does less harm to our
environment. It does not add more carbon
dioxide to the atmosphere as it absorbs the
same amount of carbon in growing as it
releases when consumed as a fuel.
Superior Wood Products Animal bedding pellets are the answer to a
premium absorbent animal bedding need. Animal owners are looking for a
product that performs as well or better than straw or wood shavings and
can be composted to produce a superior, marketable finished compost
product. Superior Wood Products animal bedding wood pellets achieve
these goals and will soon become the next generation in horse bedding
nationwide

Bedding the Stall with Wood Pellets

There are a number of ways to set up a stall with wood pellets; however,
the following series of steps seems to work quite well in most situations:

Clean out the stall down to the floor (dirt, wood, concrete, rubber mats).
Place the contents of three to five bags (40-pounds each) in the center
two-thirds of the stall, and spread the pellets out to an even depth of
roughly 2 inches. Alternatively, you may also locate the bedded area where
the horse prefers to go
The number of bags used will depend on the size of the stall, climate,
horses habits, and personal experience from working with the bedding.

Next, lightly moisten the pellets with 2 to 3 gallons of water to initiate their
opening to a fluffy consistency. (I think this is the secret to success with
wood pellet bedding.) The water serves to break down the resin sheen on
the sides of the pellet. The amount of water used will depend on the
humidity of your area and may vary at different times of the year.

For deeper bedding, you may choose to add one or two more bags on top
and again moisten with 1 to 2 gallons of water. Deeper bedding is not
always advantageous, and therefore some experimentation is appropriate to
optimize product use.

Because they are highly absorbent, its OK to be stingy with wood pellets.

Within 20 minutes of wetting, the bedding will expand to approximately 3
to 4 times its original depth and it will take on a much softer texture and a
whitish color. It will continue to grow somewhat over the course of the
first week.

Approximately once a week, up to 1 bag of new pellets will need to be
added to compensate for the amount of manure and saturated bedding
taken out of the stall. Note: these new pellets should be scattered evenly
and do not need to be wetted down when they are added to the mix. Many
horse owners who use pellets strip the stalls once every two or three
months, instead of weekly, thereby saving a considerable amount of waste
volume and significantly reducing the cost of bedding and labor.

Because the solid manure separates so easily from the fine wood fibers,
very little of the bedding is actually removed from the stall. The urine
saturated areas should be removed entirely, leaving only dry to moist
bedding (Key: Do not scatter the saturated bedding, as some brands
suggest, as this will lead to ammonia odors and necessitate mucking out
the entire stall before the material has been fully utilized).
Superior Wood Products
Specifications

Moisture Total 4.67% To 6.37%
Ash %  <1.0%
Max Pellet Length 1.0045 in
Pellet Dia 0.2905 in/ 0.375 in
% Fines 0.5%
Bulk Density <40.5 lbs/cu.ft.
Water soluble sodium 120 ppm
(0.0120%)

Heating Value BTU/LB. 8100 To 8349
SPECIFICATIONS
MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET

SUPERIOR WOOD PELLETS

DISPOSAL CONSIDERATION
No special requirements
TRANSPORT INFORMATION
DOT Information * 49 CFR 172.101
DOT Description * Non-regulated by DOT
Container/Mode:
30 & 40 lb. Bags
600 to 800 cu. in.
NOS component:
None
RQ (Reportable Quantity) * CFR 172.101
Not Applicable
REGULATORY INFORMATION
US Federal Regulations
TSCA (Toxic Substances Control Act) Status
None
CERCLA RQ * 40 CFR 302.4
None
SARA 302 Components * 40 CFR 355 Appendix A
None
Section 311/312 Hazard Class * 40 CFR 370.2
None (X) Immediate ( ) Delayed ( ) Fire ( ) Reactive ( ) Sudden Release of
Pressure ( )
Sara 313 components * 40 CFR 372.65
None
International Regulations
DSL Canada
None
State and Local Regulations
California Proposition 55
None
Pennsylvania RTK Label Information
None
OTHER INFORMATION
The information accumulated herein is believed to be accurate but is not warranted to be
accurate whether originating with the company or not. Some results is published data
from trade sources.
Recipients are advised to confirm in advance that the information is current, applicable,
and suitable to their circumstances. Please contact the company with any particular
information or requirements.
Pellet Fuel Appliances

Pellet fuel appliances burn small, 3/8–1 inch (100–254 millimeter [mm])-
long pellets that look like rabbit feed. Pellets are made from compacted
sawdust and wood chips material.   They are more convenient to operate
and have much higher combustion and heating efficiencies than ordinary
wood stoves or fireplaces. As a consequence of this, they produce very
little air pollution. In fact, pellet stoves are the cleanest of solid fuel-burning
residential heating appliances. With combustion efficiencies of 78%–85%,
they are also exempt from United States Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) smoke-emission testing requirements. Pellet stoves have heating
capacities that range between 8,000 and 90,000 Btu per hour. They are
suitable for homes as well as apartments or condominiums.

Most pellet stoves cost between $1,700 and $3,000. However, a pellet
stove is often cheaper to install than a cordwood-burning heater. Many can
be direct-vented and do not need an expensive chimney or flue. As a result,
the installed cost of the entire system may be less than that of a
conventional wood stove.

Pellet fuel appliances are available as freestanding stoves or fireplace
inserts. Freestanding units resemble conventional cordwood heaters in that
they generally heat a single room well, but not adjacent rooms unless you
use a fan to force the warm air into those other spaces. There are also
fireplace inserts that fit into existing fireplaces. Several companies now
make pellet-fired furnaces and boilers for replacement of, or a supplement
to, gas or oil fired furnaces and boilers in residential space heating systems.

All pellet fuel appliances have a fuel hopper to store the pellets until they
are needed for burning. Most hoppers hold 35 and 130 pounds (16 and 60
kilograms [kg]) of fuel, which will last a day or more under normal
operating conditions. A feeder device, like a large screw, drops a few
pellets at a time into the combustion chamber for burning. How quickly
pellets are fed to the burner determines the heat output. The exhaust gases
are vented by way of a small flue pipe that can be directed out a side wall
or upwards through the roof. More advanced models have a small
computer and thermostat to govern the pellet feed rate.

Pellet appliances usually require refueling only once a day, and since the
fuel is compressed and bagged, the operator does not have to lift heavy,
dirty logs. Most pellet appliance exteriors (except glass doors) stay
relatively cool while operating, reducing the risk of accidental burns. Since
pellet stoves burn fuel so completely, very little creosote builds up in the
flue, posing less of a fire hazard.
ANIMAL BEDDING TECHNIQUES