archerynut
Platinum Member
I enjoy the work of heating with wood. I save about 450 gallons of oil each year by using wood.
I enjoy the work of heating with wood. I save about 450 gallons of oil each year by using wood.
This is my 31st year heating with wood (half my life). With the skyrocketing fuel prices, the firewood pile looks better all the time. I've been using the BX24 to haul logs out of the woods for six seasons now. My back thanks the little orange work horse every day. I can't imagine getting firewood out without it. I estimate that my total fossil fuel input to cut, haul and split 7-8 cords of wood at less than 10 gallons (diesel for the Kubota and gas for the saw and splitter). The firewood saves me approximately 1,000 gallons of fuel oil. At today's prices that's big money.
Call it a pet pev of mine but when I see couples with 2800 sqf houses with central air saying they can't afford to live I just shake my head. It's one thing if you have a big family but otherwise a big house is just more to clean, keep up, and heat.
Evacuated tubes work just fine in very cold temps. Any frost disappears as soon as the sun comes up. The tubes do not get hot, so snow can be an issue. Even so, with all the snow we had this winter (a lot) I only roof-raked the tubes 3 times, and two of those was just because I wanted to take advantage of a sunny day and not wait. I have REALLY good southern exposure so if yours is questionable you may need to clear some trees. Relying totally on solar for hot water may be asking too much for some folks. I live mostly alone but a family of 3 or more would likely need some sort of conventional water heater. Last December was mostly overcast and combined with the short days I had to be selective with my hot water use. I'm willing to live with that where a wife and kids may not. The rest of the winter was fine, in fact at times I took extra long showers just to knock the temp down a bit.I've been thinking of adding a solar hot water system. I looked into it a little bit but never really found anyone who could give me an honest opinion as to how well they work in New England. I've heard the solar vac tubes will frost and not work when it's real cold. How well does it work in the colder months in winter? Honestly I probably would be happy having one that only worked from Mid April to Mid November reliably.
Curious what happened to your firebox and how you
fixed it since we are considering putting a wood stove insert into our masonry
fireplace by next winter. Is this a common issue with wood inserts? Got to
find a way to use less oil.