Buying a Wood Stove
Introduction:
Like all major appliance
purchases, buying a wood stove is not an easy decision.
There are many to choose from and the cost can run from a few hundred
dollars for a good used wood stove stove to as high as three thousand dollars for
the so-called "state of the art" wood stove.
Before deciding on buying a wood stove, you
should ask yourself a few questions. First, what type of wood stove do I
want, air-tight or simple up-draft? Second, where am I
going to use it, in a living area of the house or in an unfinished part
of the basement? Third, am I looking for aesthetics or am I only
concerned about augmenting the primary heat system? Fourth, is my
chimney adequate to accommodate a woodstove? Finally, how much can I
afford to spend on a woodstove?
Tips on Buying a Wood Burning
Stove
First, if you are buying a wood stove that was
made after 1990 it is probably an air-tight stove. Air-tight implies
that there are one or more sources of air to the firebox. The firebox is
designed with one or more baffles to provide a secondary burning chamber
for the gases to burn rather than being exhausted up the chimney.
The EPA established emission guidelines for
wood stoves in the 1990s limiting
smoke emissions to 2-5 grams per hour with virtually no ash. This
amounts to 90 percent fewer emissions and 33% more fuel efficiency than
the older up-draft stoves. I do not recommend an up-draft stove. They
are extremely inefficient.
How and where are you
going to use the wood stove? It is assumed that your underlying purpose
for buying a wood stove is to augment your primary heating system, and
therefore we will not consider aesthetics. Placing it in the living
space or the basement will provide heat system augmentation; however,
there are a couple of key issues to consider.
First there is the issue of
the location of the chimney and how will wood be hauled through the
house, which is an arduous and messy chore. The best place to store wood
is in the basement. Storing wood in the basement will greatly reduce the
mess in the living area as well as having the wood supply nearby.
The next major issue, is in determining if
your chimney is of adequate size to support a woodstove? If it was built
in the last twenty years, it probably is. Most wood burning stoves have
a six-inch outlet pipe. A six or eight inch chimney with a liner is
adequate.
The third key issue is in regards to how much
you want to spend on a wood stove? A used wood stove can be inexpensive
and there are many good ones on the market. If a stove was built before
the 1990s, and has a baffle system to increase burning efficiency, it
can be considered a good stove. Most of the older stoves are built of
3/16th to 1/4 inch rolled steel. Others were built of cast iron. In
either case, they were built to last for many years.
If you search long and hard, you may find some
good buys for these stoves for under $200. The new stoves with fancy
glass doors, and that sit on a pedestal style stand, run from $500 to as
much as $3000.00 for the soapstone styles. However, you can find a good
wood stove in the range of $800 to $1,000.
Personally, I would settle for the older stove
with a front loading door that can accommodate 20 to 24 inch wood
lengths, and that can be placed in a non-living area, such as the
basement.
To increase the heat to the living area above
the basement, I would suggest placing a hood over the stove and ducting
it to the upstairs living area as suggested in the "Installation of Hood
over Wood Stove Ebook" at
http://www.homeadditionplus.com
Related articles:
Chimney Sweeping | How to Clean a Chimney
Cleaning a Woodstove Pipe
Fireplace Efficiency
Fireplace and Woodstove Safety
Gas Fireplaces
How to Buy a Wood Stove
Starting Fireplace Fires
Wood Burning Stove
Wood Heat Cost Comparison
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