The second episode of the BBC television series Tales from the Wild Wood (BBC4, Wednesday 24th October 2012) featured a wood-fired oven being used by two chaps in a woodland in Wales to prepare a wood-fuel product that was essentially cut pieces of coppice that as a result of drying in their oven for eight hours was extremely dry.
One of the benefits of drying to them was to reduce the mass of the final product making it lighter to transport. They also said it burned much hotter than regularly seasoned timber.
They claimed it was almost 0% moisture content - although as they showed one of the chaps measuring it using a moisture meter in the end-grain, I'm not convinced they actually demonstrated that. My moisture meter instructions state, and my own experience confirms that end-grain measurements are inaccurate and you ought to measure across a freshly split face of the log being measured.
I am however interested in the wood-fired smallish oven they were using. Does anyone know if such things are commercially available? I assume large industrial kilns are used for much of the kiln-dried firewood available and they might well be heated using some other form of fuel or energy source. This one interests as it didn't appear too large and was heated by burning wood.