Hi, there's no doubt that "lengths" dry differently (assuming the same thickness and width). 8' definitely dries faster than 16'.
The only real way to know by how much is by tracking your lumber with an inline moisture meter. Its possible with a pin meter however the inline will give far better data (max mc/piece and av mc/piece).
Upon determing the difference in rate of drying of your various lengths you can then "build" your charges accordingly.
We're a southern yellow pine mill. After determing how our 2x4's, 2x6's, 2x8's, 2x10's, and 2x12's, 8-16 dried on an individual th x width x length basis we started experimenting with different charge building scenarios.
Ex - all 2x4's with 2x6x8 and 2x6x10
- 2x4x8 and 2x4x10 with 4/4
- 2x6x12, 14, 16 with 2x8x8, 2x8x10, 2x10x8, and 2x10x10
You can begin to see the possible combinations one can come up with.
Also think of building your charge based on "placement" on the charge. If you have more heat on the top of the kiln load than bottom, then obviously load the faster drying items on the bottom. Same with end to end temp variances. Hopefully you don't have any temp variance within the kiln but if you do then here is a way to work around it.
If you have zone control you could adjust the DB in various zones t o account for the difference in drying rate based on length.
Hope this helps. George Culp