New Wood Stove

   / New Wood Stove
  • Thread Starter
#21  
GBeck: I doubt you really get more ash. Any volume of wood, converted to heat and gas, reduces to a given amount of unburnable residue. Put more wood in the combustion chamber, get more ash. Put in less wood, get less ash. The ash buildup is a function of total wood volume you put in the stove, not the size of a particular piece.

well makes sense when you put it that way...:eek:

and I think I got it figure out now what I am doing wrong...I have basically just shut the damper to the closed position and never touched it, making the fire burn hot before doing this makes good sense as well...thanks groundcover will start that as well...
 
   / New Wood Stove #22  
It definitely helps to get the fire hot after you load it up before you throttle it back. If you have a stove with a Catalytic Converter... it is about mandatory get the fire going hot to restart the Cat C before you throttle it back.
For wood storage, my attached garage is 15' wide, with a 9' door, so I have room on the side and under the stairs for about 3/4 cord of wood. The rest of the 2 cord I use a year is out in the tractor hut. When the garage pile is getting low, the next clear day I use the tractor to 'restock' the garage from the hut.
 
   / New Wood Stove #23  
My woodstove is in my basement and I used to put 10 full cords of wood all around the furnace in one corner of the basement. I use less wood and more propane, so I brought in 6 cords this year.

.

I'm not doubting your word but you must have a BIG basement. One cord is 4x4x8ft, 10 of those would take up a large area!:)
 
   / New Wood Stove #24  
I'm not doubting your word but you must have a BIG basement. One cord is 4x4x8ft, 10 of those would take up a large area!:)
I was thinking the same thing. "man, that guy must have a huge basement".

10 cords would take up 40' wide by 8' deep by 4' high

or

20' wide by 8' deep piled up to the ceiling.
 
   / New Wood Stove #25  
I have a huge crawlspace about 8' tall surrounding the finished basement.
I got plenty of room in there for that amount of wood (although I don't need nearly that much), but I was under the impression you should not store your firewood near or in the house for numerous reasons? I've been racking my brain as to where to build the firewood shed. Not too close but not too far.
 
   / New Wood Stove #26  
I have a huge crawlspace about 8' tall surrounding the finished basement.
I got plenty of room in there for that amount of wood ...

No kidding? We have a 1300 square foot house with a full basement. I guess the key word there is "full"! :D We have so much stuff there isn't any room for firewood. :rolleyes:
 
   / New Wood Stove #27  
Yeah, in some places the crawlspace is over 10' tall! The lowest area is about 8' tall.
The main footprint is about 40' x 50' with only a 980sq/ft finished basement. This is a pic of only one part of it. It is "U" shaped around the finished basement. I put an entry door into the front thinking I could turn that space into something later ... maybe store firewood?

 
   / New Wood Stove #28  
Lots of small pieces can make more ash since if they are sticks they have more bark per "cord". Bark makes tons of ash. If the small stuff is just big stuff split down then the ash amount should be the same as if you had burned big stuff.

If your stove can comfortably take 20" logs then use them. This provides a fuller firebox and also less surface area to combust. The modern EPA stove will provide plenty of air to quickly burn your wood, even on its lowest setting, so to slow it down you need to use bigger chunks and stack tightly to slow the burn. My stove is rated for 21" logs but I cut to 18" to allow easy loading.

The number of catalytic stoves has become so small that they are mostly a novelty these days. Only a couple of brands even offer them and they are the oddball ones like Blaze king and woodstock. Personally, I would love to own a stove from either of these companies and a cat stove especially. VC is no longer a brand worthy of consideration unless you like sticking your finger in your eye.

Rob, if your wood is dry and your crawlspace is dry then you can store your wood there. The usual reasons like fire danger, wood rot, and bug invasion are eliminated if you have already dried your wood and if your crawlspace is basicly a cellar. I would stack it away from the walls and on pallets. I can't believe you haven't converted that space into something cool.
 
   / New Wood Stove #29  
The number of catalytic stoves has become so small that they are mostly a novelty these days. Only a couple of brands even offer them and they are the oddball ones like Blaze king and woodstock. Personally, I would love to own a stove from either of these companies and a cat stove especially.
VC is no longer a brand worthy of consideration unless you like sticking your finger in your eye.
Why do you say that about the VC stoves? It would not surprise me, as I understand the company has been sold at least 3 times since I bought my stove in '86, but my stove has been great and I have been very happy with it. I have used several other 'premium' stoves over the years and none have them have been as good or user friendly as my VC has been. Is it a quality of product issue or company support?
 
   / New Wood Stove #30  
My mom burns sawmill blocks, they are oak and run from 4"x6"x10" to 6"x8"x12" or so. There is no bark on any of them and she has next to no ash.
 

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