Q&A Irish Waterford Trinity II fireplace not heating

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QandA

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Nov 27, 2012
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Question:

I just bought an Irish Waterford Trinity II fireplace. It is located in the basement of our house. My problem is that it isnt heating like I thought it would. I get a hot bed of coals and add wood to it. Then I close the damper slightly so I dont shut it completely off. The fire seems to go good but the unit is not giving off sufficient heat. our finished basement is only about 400 sq.ft. and it only keeps it around 69-70 degrees, max. The heat doesn't even touch the upstairs. My wood has been cut for a year and it is dry. Is this stove just for looks or is their anything I can do differently?



Answer:

The large cement mass of basement floors and walls can soak up heat like a sponge. Imagine trying to heat up against the effect of all that weight!

Are you putting a decent amount of wood through it? 100 or more pounds on a cold day?

If the stove has some single wall surfaces on it, buy a magnetic thermometer and place it on the stove. Try to get temps above 500 degrees on single wall parts of the top and front. If you get in the range from 500-750 F, a decent amount of heat should be thrown off. Also, if they sell an optional blower for it, you might want to try it.
 
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