Stove ID and Rating (heating capacity)

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.
Status
Not open for further replies.

cjcocn

New Member
Nov 21, 2011
4
Manitoba, Canada
Good afternoon. :)

I am looking at purchasing this stove in hopes that it will heat 1800 sq ft of space.

I cannot find any information on it except that it is listed as a Frontier Mark V.

Can anyone provide me with some indication of what the heating capacity for this stove would be?

The dimensions are:

Overall 34" x 34"
Firebox is 22" wide at the bottom and 20" deep. Opening is 9.3" tall.

Thanks for any help that you can provide.

Here are some pics:

http://i681.photobucket.com/albums/vv176/cjcocn/Firewood Hauling Pics/FrontierStove03Medium.jpg

http://i681.photobucket.com/albums/vv176/cjcocn/Firewood Hauling Pics/FrontierStove02Medium.jpg

http://i681.photobucket.com/albums/vv176/cjcocn/Firewood Hauling Pics/FrontierStove01Medium.jpg

http://i681.photobucket.com/albums/vv176/cjcocn/Firewood Hauling Pics/FrontierStove04Medium.jpg
 
That looks pretty heavy duty, more like a Canadian vault than a stove. The only link I found was for the trademark listed to Frontier Service Industries in Manitoba. You might call this place to see if they were the mfg.

Frontier Industries
299 Channing Dr
Flin Flon MB R8A1N6

Contact Number
204-687-8657
 

Attachments

  • FrontierStove03Medium.jpg
    FrontierStove03Medium.jpg
    62.8 KB · Views: 400
BeGreen said:
That looks pretty heavy duty, more like a Canadian vault than a stove. The only link I found was for the trademark listed to Frontier Service Industries in Manitoba. You might call this place to see if they were the mfg.

Frontier Industries
299 Channing Dr
Flin Flon MB R8A1N6

Contact Number
204-687-8657

Turns out it was a welding shop, but thanks for the response. :)

I was hoping that at the least someone could post up with some firsthand experiences regarding the area that these stoves have been known to heat. I will buy the stove and the next time someone asks I will be in a position to provide one perspective. :)

Thanks again.
 
That thing sounds inbetween a fisher grandma bear and grandpa bear. Do so searching online here to see what you get. Have LOTS of wood on hand. Otherwise it should be capable of heating you out of a gymnasium. My grandma threw heat like crazy, and I could get it to hold coals most nights without having to smother it too bad. I really enjoyed that style heater for how fast it would heat up and heat this place up. However, it took me 5.5 to 6 cord of hardwoods keeping it fed to heat exclusively with wood here in Pa.

pen
 
I remember the brand - it was yet another Fisher-type knock off. Definitely heavy-duty.

The best way to get an idea of the heating capacity is to measure the usable firebox and use our burn time calculator....
https://www.hearth.com/econtent/index.php/articles/burn_time_calculator

This will give you a BTU range at various burn times - depending on wood type, which you can use to determine heating ability.
 
pen said:
That thing sounds inbetween a fisher grandma bear and grandpa bear. Do so searching online here to see what you get. Have LOTS of wood on hand. Otherwise it should be capable of heating you out of a gymnasium. My grandma threw heat like crazy, and I could get it to hold coals most nights without having to smother it too bad. I really enjoyed that style heater for how fast it would heat up and heat this place up. However, it took me 5.5 to 6 cord of hardwoods keeping it fed to heat exclusively with wood here in Pa.

pen

LOL ... I just pulled about 6 cords out before snow fell so I have enough to last me until the winter trails are frozen. That will open up some more cutting areas for me.
 
Webmaster said:
I remember the brand - it was yet another Fisher-type knock off. Definitely heavy-duty.

The best way to get an idea of the heating capacity is to measure the usable firebox and use our burn time calculator....
https://www.hearth.com/econtent/index.php/articles/burn_time_calculator

This will give you a BTU range at various burn times - depending on wood type, which you can use to determine heating ability.

I don't get to a computer enough to have found that calculator on my own, so thanks tons!

According to the data I was provided with the firebox is 3.1 cu ft. Using the calculator, that stove should be capable of a total BTU production (softwoods) of 130200 BTUs. I am not sure where birch rates on that scale, but even at 130K BTUs I am taking a huge step up from what I am using now.

Thanks to all for their input and I will hopefully be in a position to pass on the help sometime down the road. :)
 
One variable here will be efficiency. A modern stove is going to extract and return to the room more heat. So where an old stove might be 50% efficient a new stove could be 75% efficient. It would be a nice addition to the calculator to be able to enter this into the equation.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.