pellet/wood stove fireplace insert?

   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #31  
We have heated exclusively with wood for 20 seasons. Small one level house, 1700 square feet. Heated with a Kent (New Zealand, no longer available stateside), in Ohio winters, house fairly exposed, but we do have 6" insulation sidewalls and 10-12" in the attic. "Typical" use is 3.5-4 cords. Once used a hair over 5, and the least was a little over 2. Bear in mind we have a fairly open floor plan, our house is easier to heat than the typical house of the same size. And this is fairly accurate as we stack/store our wood in by the cord under a wing.

Also heat a 20x30 shop in the barn with wood x 20 years. Used several asstd. old stoves, bought a QuadraFire 5 years ago. I have to keep the shop from freezing even when not using it, as we store "freezeable" things in there....so I usually build a small fire in there each evening. That IS INCLUDED in the wood usage above. I estimate I use a cord in the shop. While the Kent is one of the most efficient stoves I have ever seen (and 20 years ago Consumer Reports rated it light years ahead of other stoves), the QuadraFire is impressive. It will not shut down as low as the Kent, but it heats quickly and puts out an amazing amount of heat for the amount of wood it consumes.
 
   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #32  
Sigarms,

I have to guess on my wood usage. I split the wood and then stack it on pallets. I then use the tractor to move the pallets up to the house as needed. At this point we have burned about a cord. I'm guessing we will burn at least two or three more cords before spring. If its two cords that would be good since I have that much split. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

But I'll keep cutting and splitting. What is not used this year will be for next winter. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif

Later,
Dan
 
   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #33  
Growing up, we always assumed 6 cords per year. Came out pretty close. Our long and mild winters make a long heating season even though it is not bitter cold out.

"Due to the price difference at this point, leaning towards a wood stove" Be careful here since it is like owning pet horses, the cheapest part is the horse itself.

Take a look at some of the sites out there. THere is a good site called thehearth.something. Good information about wood burning from people obsessed with it. I'll look for it.
 
   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #34  
I found this article today on corn stoves. Some of the interesting qoutes are:

</font><font color="blue" class="small">( We've been sold out for almost six months," said Mike Haefner, president of Minnesota-based American Energy Systems. "We're going to be building eight times as much next year just to try to keep up, but we already have 50 percent of that sold." )</font>

</font><font color="blue" class="small">( Haefner said there were about 65,000 corn stoves sold in the US last year. He expects about 150,000 will be sold this year and at least 350,000 next year. )</font>

Corn Stove Sales Rise Link

Its gotten colder here with the temps touching the 20's and with high maybe touching 50. My house temps drop during the day so its harder for our wood stove to catch up during the evening and night. The chimney sweep was here Monday and the heat pump finally came on for the first time this season. Its been running off and on if we can't keep the stove running.

I'm looking for a thermostat that we could set to run at a certain hour for a certain time. So far no luck.

One of these corn stoves might be in our future when we add the garage and sun room someday.

Later,
Dan
 
   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #35  
I feel for you. It's 15 here maybe touching 20 and the wind is strong, blowing our last snow across the roads.

It's sad (and not on thread) that there will probably be quite a few folks on marginal incomes or public assistance freeze to death this winter in the northern United States.

Right now, we are running a bag of pellet fuel every 12 hours. The house is right at 70'. The dogs are curled up in front of the pellet stove sharing the space with our boots and gloves drying and staying warm.
 
   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #36  
I installed my Breckwell P24I 2 week's ago and could not be happier. Mine also uses 1 bag every 12 hours and keep's the house at 70 unless the wind is blowing. I am not sure if I am saving any money because pellets were $5 a bag and that was buying 3 ton's. Didn't have much choice to pay it though because the place where I bough mine was the only place that had any and when I left they only had 2 ton's left and were not sure when they were going to get anymore.
 

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   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #37  
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( To "quantify" fuel usage to an extent, anyone here have a wood stove, and if so, how many of cords of wood do you use for the stove during the winter months?

Due to the price difference at this point, leaning towards a wood stove.

)</font>

To help you with your research take a look here http://hearth.com/what/specific.html Tons of useful info and fuel cost comparison calc is a great help.

On a weight basis wood doesn't vary too much in energy content but for cord wood we buy by volumn and not weight.

For me, now wood pellets are the cheapest fuel source by a good margin. If you live where shelled corn is in demand and have good sources, corn is likely going to be the cheapest as commodity price for corn is running $2/bu.

I replaced a wood burning insert 2 yrs ago with a pellet stove and haven't regreted it a bit. I still have several cords of fire wood I'd like to sell.
 
   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #38  
"On a weight basis wood doesn't vary too much in energy content but for cord wood we buy by volumn and not weight."

True, but you can specify the species of wood. I wouldn't pay the same for a cord of cottonwood as I would a cord of madrona. Of course, this assumes you buy your firewood in a ready to burn state which increases cost tremendously over cutting your own or even having log loads delivered to be processed by you.
 
   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #39  
Here in N.W. Ga it has been a pretty cool December so far. In the mid 20's and up to 50's in the day. My home is an A frame with LOTS of glass on the front facing west. Great heat gain on sunny days. Trees protect me from the gain in the summer. The glass conducts a lot of cold though. Two heat pumps, one on each level. My basement has no heat but never gets cold enough that I can't work work in my shop down there. Just in case have a kerosene portable blower though.
Have had a Waterford wood stove for 6 years now. It has a glass door on front for excellent radiant heat. It is located in the living room and the heat rises easily to the second floor. The bedrooms in back are about 10 degrees cooler than the rest of the house. As it it just my wife and I sleeping on the second floor, this is not a problem. In fact I keep the bedroom upstairs closed off, except at night to keep it cool.

I typically use about 2 cords of wood a year. 4X4X8'. Living on 10 acres of oak and hickory helps a lot. God himself brings down enough trees for me a year to split. This year for instance, I have still to finish up a 30"x 70' log of hickory to get cured.
I keep my woodpile covered with a tarp. If I split the wood like today, it is cured enough by late February so that it burns fine. Yes, some may say that this isnt long enough. How I guage this is by the tar build up on the glass door when I shut the stove down for the night. NO BUILD UP=CURED. I clean out my pipe, usually unnecessary, once a year. The cap does get some soot build up that slows down air circulation through the stove.
To make a long story short. I keep the lower thermostat on 55 with the upper off. The lower seldom comes on. If you have the wood available, do it...............Dennis
 
   / pellet/wood stove fireplace insert? #40  
I have a jotul kennebec, same as tamarack insert with blower. I installed it this year while a woodstove would heat better i did not want to add a flue pipe and did not want to lose the "fireplace". Not often these days does a product live up to your expectations but this jotul unit does. It came packed better than any product i have ever purchased, fit and finish were excellent and the instructions were clear and precise. They are not cheap but I wanted to install once and be done, the style is better than most out there, i like the arched glass doors. It was the largest unit I could fit in my fireplace, it does not burn as long as I would like (4-5 hours)heats for about 7,but that is a function of it's size. My house is 1700 square feet, two floors, not the best set up for wood heat with fireplace being at one end. I bought it to supplement my fuel bill, not totally heat the house and to burn up the shorts and root flares (ugly wood) that I have accumulated over the years, I sell most of the good wood bagged in 1 cu foot units ( gas station wood). I am really happy with the decision so far, no oil deliveries yet but it is early in the season, i figure a two to three year payback. This is just a bridge untill my oil furnace craps out then i will go to a tarm wood fired boiler with oil back up (real expensive). glenn...
 

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