Help me spend Lowes giftcard: ESW 25-EP vs 10-CPM

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Picked up the EP25 Sunday night. Its just sitting in my hallway for the time being, but it looks great. I've been pretty busy doing some electric work and decking in my attic and installing additional insulation.

Insulation is key. Others can and have said it better than me, but the heat output from a pellet stove is best described as "gentle," unlike the blast of heat coming out of a big honkin' wood stove. It's essential to hang on to those BTU's and really make them work for you.

We installed our pellet stove with an Outside Air Kit (OAK) in 2008 (see signature.) We were told that our stove would "run us out of here." We spent that winter feeling cold and disappointed, and eyeing the stove and the pellets suspiciously. I will admit to having the memory and the mindset of the wood stove craze of the 1970's, during the Arab Oil Embargo, when family members' wood stoves would indeed run one out of the house with heat. It wasn't unusual to walk into someone's house in mid-January and find the wood stove rolling full blast and a window opened.

Slowly, with the help of Hearth.com members, I got to know and learned to love our pellet stove. The heat is different. It puts out BTU's but you can't be wasteful of them, because there isn't a lot of excess when you are trying to heat a large space with it. Also, along a slightly different but connected flow chart of problem solving, we replaced the old and undersized central a/c unit. After a brutally hot summer in which the new, appropriately sized central a/c unit struggled to keep up, followed by a brutally cold winter in which the pellet stove struggled to keep up, we got serious about insulating our attic.

The difference was noticeable and it registered, in plain numbers, on the digital HVAC thermometer in the center hallway of the house, on the day that the attic insulation was installed. That day. Within an hour or two of the installation. So yeah, there was our problem.

We've since done additional things to help- it's now a game of inches and pennies on the dollar, but we've yet to see diminishing returns. Our house is brick and block with no wall insulation. Surprisingly, insulating our electrical outlets and switches with UL approved inserts made specifically for that purpose, plus child safety plugs in all sockets that we don't use continuously, made a noticeable difference as well. We insulated the outlets and switches on the outer walls first. It made such a difference that we spent this past Saturday insulating all of the outlets and switches on the interior walls as well. (I posted a thread about it on this forum.) My husband also went around the house with a can of spray insulation foam and plugged up the holes where our plumbing punctures a wall.

As far as insulating electrical outlets and their prong openings, plus switches, it also makes a difference in new construction if the builder didn't install insulated fixtures. We have a new construction property to which we hope to retire in a few years. Winters at that location can be remarkable, with wind coming off of the nearby water with significant wind chill. The highest wind we've recorded at that location NOT associated with a storm system, just plain old winter wind, was over 60 mph, directly impacting the back of the house with no wind break. I've stood in the back rooms on windy days (albeit I've not been there for the 60 mph winds yet) and felt wind blowing into the room from the prong openings in the electrical sockets. Through the prong openings, mind you... To that point I'd blown off insulating electrical outlets/switches as small stuff, and wondered if it was worth the time or the money. That moment changed my mind, at least for that location. The difference there was so noticeable that we followed through for the fixtures on the exterior perimeter of the brick/block/no wall insulation bungalow in town. And that made such a difference that we've moved on to the fixtures on interior walls.

NOW ALL ELECTRICAL SOCKETS AND SWITCHES WILL BE INSULATED.

Yeah, I've gotten a little obsessive/compulsive about insulation since the feedback from doing it has been so direct, so immediate, so noticeable. :) I'm a bit like Pavlov's Human in the Insulation Aisle at the Big Box Home Improvement Store. :) SAVE ME A PENNY ON MY UTILITY BILLS AND I'M YOURS FOREVER. :)

What were we talking about again? OH- big congrats on your new pellet stove!
 
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Good luck with the noisy auger. In my stove, the noise levels depend on the pellets. Certain pellets make more auger squeaking for some strange reason. What are you burning?

I was burning Greenways, and have moved to Somersets for the cold snap. In between those two I tried out a bag of Easy Heat, and it was squeaky auger central. Holy crap. Now it's all quiet with the 'sets on board.
 
What are you burning?

Still burning through the dozen bags of North American pellets I bought from Lowes along with the stove. I have read that they are re-labeled Curran hardwood, although these state that they are a hardwood softwood mix. My neighbor burns stove chow from HD, which I will probably try as well. I placed a couple of calls to local landscape suppliers who carry pellets, but nobody's called back yet.

As far as the graphite goes, I sprayed the bejeebus out of the auger last night, as well as a coffee can worth of pellets, and it bought me a couple of hours. The squeaks returned in full force from the hours of 1 am to 4:30 am, despite my repeatedly spraying pellets with graphite in a coffee can. Spraying directly into the hopper results in a large musroom cloud, so I wont be doing that again. :)

Any other less invasive suggestions before I pull the auger out and grind it down a bit for clearance?
 
Sorry in advance and this normally isn't like me but.....a brand new stove with an auger squeak (known problem) that keeps you awake at night.....you get what you pay for.....


Lol....someone woke up on the wrong side of the bed....

Harman's have their fair share of issues....do a search on this forum and I am sure you will find plenty......just sayin
 
Like I said....not like me to say something like that and that's why I apologized first....deleted post.
Sorry GuitsBoy.
 
No need to apologize, in advance or otherwise. But my experience searching for solutions to auger squeak has show this is NOT a "you get what you pay for" situation. Higher end stoves are just as susceptible to the noise. We are all entitled to hold our own convictions.
 
No need to apologize, in advance or otherwise. But my experience searching for solutions to auger squeak has show this is NOT a "you get what you pay for" situation. Higher end stoves are just as susceptible to the noise. We are all entitled to hold our own convictions.
You shouldn't have an auger squeak in a brand new stove....and to consider tearing it apart to solve it after running for just a few hours just plain sucks.
 
Luckily your stove is easy to work on. You might be able to just pull the auger and polish it up with some emory cloth and take a look into the auger flyte and see if anything is going on in there.
 
Got the pellet stove installed over the weekend ahead of schedule, this way I have have the place nice and warm for when my family arrives for Thanksgiving break. Unfortunately with less than 24 hours burn time, I've joined the auger squeak club. It was horrible, incessant, and I couldn't get to sleep. I finally hit my breaking point and got up at 1 am and spent an hour and a half shutting the stove down, emptying the hopper, fiddling with the auger, and finally shaving pencil lead down to lube the auger with graphite. Against all odds, the pencil graphite actually worked, and it was squeak free until morning, when it finally started whining again.

I've read different resolutions; some people just use graphite, some realign the auger, others simply wait for the auger to wear in, and someone even filed the auger down to prevent binding. Any suggestions on what method to try first? Any suggestions would be very helpful.

Anyway, Heres the stove:
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20131123_115316.jpg

Looks good! Sorry about the auger squeak!
 
Still burning through the dozen bags of North American pellets I bought from Lowes along with the stove. I have read that they are re-labeled Curran hardwood, although these state that they are a hardwood softwood mix. My neighbor burns stove chow from HD, which I will probably try as well. I placed a couple of calls to local landscape suppliers who carry pellets, but nobody's called back yet.

As far as the graphite goes, I sprayed the bejeebus out of the auger last night, as well as a coffee can worth of pellets, and it bought me a couple of hours. The squeaks returned in full force from the hours of 1 am to 4:30 am, despite my repeatedly spraying pellets with graphite in a coffee can. Spraying directly into the hopper results in a large musroom cloud, so I wont be doing that again. :)

Any other less invasive suggestions before I pull the auger out and grind it down a bit for clearance?

Try some different pellets before you tear things apart. In my stove, North Americans, Easy Heat, and Eco Flame pellets all made a terrible racket. For whatever reason, when I switched to different pellets it went away. North Americans are a terrible pellet in most stoves. Try something different first.

I actually have an un-opened container of graphite because of that situation. Never had to use it after I switched pellets. It's probably a bur or something that will need ground down, but try the easy fixes first!
 
Try some different pellets before you tear things apart. In my stove, North Americans, Easy Heat, and Eco Flame pellets all made a terrible racket. For whatever reason, when I switched to different pellets it went away. North Americans are a terrible pellet in most stoves. Try something different first.

I actually have an un-opened container of graphite because of that situation. Never had to use it after I switched pellets. It's probably a bur or something that will need ground down, but try the easy fixes first!

Its really not that big a deal for me to tear it down, or so it seems. Judging by the sound, I don't think its a burr so much as a rubbing. It happens for 2 or 3 cycles once every revolution of the auger, so I suspect something is a little oblong, and as the heat gets to it, it begins to bind inside the bore. Id love to fix the root of the issue rather than cover it up by changing pellets, but perhaps ill try a different brand first. Unfortunately pellets are not as popular here as they are in other parts of the country, so selection and availability is somewhat limited.

Thanks for all the suggestions everyone. Ill post up my progress. Aside from the noise, the stove has been great.
 
Happy Thanksgiving every.

Just wanted to post that I have been able to subdue 90% of the squeaking by running the blower a little higher. Seems that the squeak is far more prevalent when the stove is hot, and by simply keeping the blower speed a few clicks above the heat range, I can effectively keep the stove cooler. I haven't tried any different brand pellets yet, but I hope to pick some up this week.
 
Make sure you plug into a surge protector. It will save your electronics if something were to happen.
 
Just an update:

99% of the auger squeak has been eliminated by using hardwood pellets instead of hardwood/softwood blend, and by playing with the room blower speed to bleed off excess heat. Seems once the stove got really hot the auger may have been expanding in its bore causing the noise. And certainly the extra pitch from a softwood blend wasnt helping matters.

Thanks for your help!
 
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I had an auger squeak after it ran a while. I found it was carbon built up at the bottom of the end. I was able to figure it out by watching the location of the auger when the noise was created.
 
Hi guys, I have a ton of lowes gift cards I've been saving to put towards a pellet stove (no AM FM, sorry)

I've narrowed it down to the summers heat rebranded Englander 25-EP or the 10-CPM because they are the newer design, single auger, Full on/off T-stat, and have larger windows. The wifey gives the EP a very slight edge in aesthetics, and of course price. I like the idea of multifuel since it will be a little less picky on pellets, although I don't plan on burning anything but straight wood pellets. We are avid DIYers, have an extensive tool collection, and access to a fully CNC machine shop if need be. Suffice it to say, I don't mind tinkering.

Stove will be placed on the east (leeward) side of the ground floor of a 2600 sq ft colonial, fairly open floor plan. There is a wood burning fireplace in the den on the windward side. Home is located on Long Island. We put 900+ gallons of oil through an old peerless boiler, with programmable t-stats set to 66/62/66/62. Natural gas is 5 houses away, but they want $40K to trench it to me. Please help me hobble along on pellets and oil at least until my neighbors are ready to upgrade their boilers. The pellet stove will be primarily supplemental heat, although Ill probably run it right through the season to try and cut down oil consumption.

Can you guys sway me one way or another between the two?

I appreciate any help, and thanks of course for the hours of previously posted reading material.
Neither of them !! You get what u pay for .. Get a Harmen !! Save the gift cards for the pellets
 
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