After a couple of months of research and agonizing I finally bought the new stove. Alderlea T6. Comes home next week.
Looking forward to the enjoyment. I see you burn a summit JT. How important is "dry" wood with these stoves? I am behind on my wood and had to order some which has not arrived yet so I'm not sure what I'm going to have to burn.
, in addition to the blocks/bricks (can mix with wood that's not quite ready to help it along, some even burn them as the primary fuel) you may find a source of pallets free for the taking, lumber mill ends, etc.
FYI seasoned wood has been very hard to find for months now, though some people are still getting luc
Congratulations! The T6 will burn less than ideal wood. I did this a couple seasons ago because I wanted to use up the wood and thought it had dried out quicker than it actually did. You will get notably shorter burns, more coaling, a dirtier flue and less heat. But it will heat. Mix it with dry wood or a good compressed wood product to help the burn and plan on cleaning the chimney more frequently, at least after each cord burned.Looking forward to the enjoyment. I see you burn a summit JT. How important is "dry" wood with these stoves? I am behind on my wood and had to order some which has not arrived yet so I'm not sure what I'm going to have to burn.
My dealer burns compressed wood bricks in all of his stoves on a showroom floor. Sometime by the end of October president of Travis industries is scheduled to stop by. I am planing on going and asking him few questions. One of them will be his opinion on a compressed wood bricks.Just wanted to point out that burnging ecologs or whatever can void your warranty. My manual with my new stove says nothing but cord wood. I've seen the recommendation put forward in several posts and just wanted to mention that you may want to double check your manual and warranty.
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