Billet (wood)

A billet was a specific and standardised form of wood fuel of significant importance in the traditional pre–fossil fuel economy.

The term could also be applied to a cudgel.

[1] Billets were especially designed for burning on open hearth fires, often in conjunction with spits.

[2] The 16th C standardised a billet as three foot four inches in length, and ten inches around.

[3] A century later, Anthony A Wood recorded a load of billet wood as costing 12s 6d; while extravagance consisted of "burning in one yeare threescore pounds worth of the choicest billet".

A split billet