10 degrees and can't keep up....

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I was doing cartwheels down the hallway when I found out that today it was going to be 21 degrees. The last few days I only saw a high of single digits, night time in the negatives. I still haven't made my upgrade though, I am still burning an old (1980) Majestic ZC fireplace. At least it does have a large firebox and a blower. I also have a good layout in my house for wood heat (tri-level house), and was luck to see 65 degrees the last few days, but I had to burn an ungodly amount of wood.
 
Been bitter here for almost a week,house never got below 72*re-loading every 12 hours,could go longer but no need to 12 hours works perfectly.

What are you burning that give you useful heat for 12 hours and keeps your house at above 72? I honestly think i'm doing something wrong ...my stove can burn for 8 hours and the temps get up in the house but it won't stay consistent and drops very quickly...either my stove is to small for my house or i'm not doing something else right
 
Just remember, you need a net BTU/h to keep house temps up. Even if you're running oil or propane to get up to 70F, every BTU you get from the stove is still cutting down on oil usage. Figure decent mixed hardwoods at roughly 200,000 BTU per cubic foot, times whatever efficiency you assume for your stove, and keep feeding it. I've gone thru a half cord (~12.8 million BTU's) this week, so even though I'm still burning some oil, I saved maybe 90 gallons (considering efficiencies of both appliances). That's more than $300 back in my pocket, almost enough to cover the cost of one of my chain saws... in one week!
 
You can always tell a cold spell because the site gets filled with these 'I cant keep up' threads. I think its just the nature of the beast, if we all installed stoves that would keep us toasty in these temps we would get baked out the rest of the season.

I'm a weekend burner with the luxury of natural gas so I cheat and let the boiler run periodically. I LOVE my stove but the 140,000 BTU steam boiler can do things the stove just cant even dream of.

The thermostat is in the stove room so I set it high (73-74) and that kicks the boiler on a few times a day for 20-30 minutes to warm up the radiators and even out the heat in the house. Without the stove that boiler would be running almost nonstop right now.

ETA: running the boiler a couple times a day has kept my uninsulated basement at 60 even in this cold.
 
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Last night I didn't load the stove full. I had a couple extra long splits that would only fit in the front or diagonal in the stove. I should-a/ would-a/ could-a gone back outside to get a proper load, but the dumb-arse in me just put in what I could.

64 in the hallway this morning, and it wasn't even the lowest overnight temp we've seen.

Dope<>
 
Regency HI300 was the largest insert I could fit. If you've ever run a smaller stove, you don't know what a pleasure it is to have hot coals to restart in the morning, or after work. It's been unusually cold since I filled my oil tank 15 days ago, but thanks to the woodstove going 24/7, the tank gauge needle has barely budged. I have the thermostat on oil burner set for 65 day, 60 night. The oil burner only comes on for a few minutes probably less than once per hour (forced air sys). It's just damn cold. Glad I can supplement the woodstove with the oil burner. Wouldn't be a fan of the "good ol' days" when you would need to keep at least 2 stoves going.
 
I think I'd pass out in that heat! That stove must be a real monster!

It is a monster and the strange thing is I'm not running it hard. A full load of wood in my liberty will cruise at 750 for an hour or two and slowly start to drop. The thermometer said 90 but it sure didn't feel like it. Got up this morning and it was still 82 in here:) Now bring on the snow
 
The furnace is helping the stove out this week. I hate to burn the gold laced, or at least priced like it is, propane, but if its only for a week, I'll deal. We'll be back to stove only next week.
 
My insert maintains well at about 15 and up. Below that it struggles. I just keep feeding it wod knowing that I am saving propane. Our house is 4 years old and well insulated. What makes me so mad is the stove rep came to our house and proclaimed this the perfect stove for our house. He said a bigger unit would be inneficient and would burn us out. We are no longer on speaking terms. I am also very dissapointed in burn time, usable heat. I love burning wood and am going back out here shortly css. Wish I had been on this site when I built this house. I definitely envy guys talking about all night burns and big loads. The thing is I was in a position to put in whatever would work best. Partly my fault I guess. Someday I will upgrade but it will be a while. At that point I want a lot more horses. Sorry just frustrating sometimes I guess I'm not the only one!
 
I really wish I went with a free standing stove rather than an insert.

Last week was one of the rare times I thought that. My insert puts out enough heat, but it's in the worst possible location to heat the house. A centrally located freestanding stove would spread the heat around much better. We don't get extreme temps here, so it works just fine most of the time.
On the plus side, cleaning my chimney with a soot-eater is as easy as it gets, the install was simple and didn't require any roof mods, and I'm not taking up any of the limited space in my living room. That, and my electric heat RARELY kicks on. The blower on my insert makes a huge difference and I'm still experimenting with two different fans in the hall to move the heat.
 
Not to hijack the post

I use to be in this same boat.... And after about 2 weeks of frustrating -0::Fit got me thinking I need to do something:oops:

After Winter 2007/2008 I made the executive decision to tight n up and insulate my 1951 era 2120 sqft Ranch.

Replaced 27 windows, blew fiberglass in to attic, replaced the front door,.

Double studded the walls to 8" in the main room of the house, filled the wall with 4" of closed cell spray foam and R15 fiberglass batt the other 4", for a total of R-35.

Had a company come out and inject open cell foam into the rest of the exterior walls.

Installed a second stove (free standing) Blaze King- King which would probably heat twice the space I have? And still have the Englander 30 (a hell of a stove in its own right)

And Im currently installing 2" polystyrine closed cell foam board on my basement and crawl space walls, some that are above ground.

It has made a big big difference......

I think the best think to do is add Insulation into the attic,its very inexpensive and pays for its self fast....
 
Oh, it's definitely my house, no doubt, draft city, stone walls, old construction, need I say more. :)

My kitchen is attached to my living room, where the stove is, it's 48 in there and so drafty thanks to a crappy build job in the 30's, just drywall, no insulation, all exterior walls - you'd swear a window was open. If you stand in front of my cabinet drawers, you can feel the breeze between the slats. We are getting new roof and siding in a few weeks thanks to Sandy damage so the draft will eventually be fixed.

However, while it was $40, I bought a vornado whole room circulation fan, best purchase I've made in a long time (other than my fiskars x27). It's small like a desk fan, with a fully adjustable head, but I put it on the floor of the kitchen doorway and that sucker moves air thru my house literally like a tornado. It has helped move the cold air from the kitchen into the living room to get warmed by the stove and move upstairs. Up there the ceiling fan pushed the air back down so we FINALLY have even temps, for the most part throughout the house, within a few degrees. I have a big heavy curtain hanging in the doorway between the kitchen and living room, if I block off the kitchen, it stays 48. Stove crankin and fan on, its 66-68 in about 30 minutes. If you also have this issue, check it out, they play a video at Bed, Bath, Beyond, it sucked me right in but glad we have it now.
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you can get them on Amazon when box stores don't sell them for the season, they may do a bit better than that price. I remember I looked a few years ago but just deal with the fans I had for that pirce. I have seen them run though my mom/stepdad have some they use in the summer to circulate the air.
 
My stove struggles once it gets below 15 degrees, its a newer house I had built and well insulated, my stove just isnt big enough for this size house on these cold nights, that said Im happy with it, my goal was to lop off 50% of my oil usage and Ive been averaging 75% so if the furnace needs to kick on now and then its no big deal. Its still much more comfortable in here all winter long than it ever was running just the furnace no matter how much it ran.
My plan was to reduce by 75-80%, I have matched that but its like an addiction. YOU want more, more, more, constantly trying to keep that furnace off in a battle against the heat. I had not run heat in like 3 seasons or so, had family over and they set my heat on my side of the house instead of thiers (I guess that they cant sleep in the 60's where the wife and I sweat at anything over like 65), I heard it kick on early Christmas mourn, I jumped out of the bed like the house was on fire and looked to see, and cut it off!! Funny thing is it was like 64 outside my room and they had set it to 68, I don't even keep it turned to heat its off!!!!!!
 
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Just remember, you need a net BTU/h to keep house temps up. Even if you're running oil or propane to get up to 70F, every BTU you get from the stove is still cutting down on oil usage. Figure decent mixed hardwoods at roughly 200,000 BTU per cubic foot, times whatever efficiency you assume for your stove, and keep feeding it. I've gone thru a half cord (~12.8 million BTU's) this week, so even though I'm still burning some oil, I saved maybe 90 gallons (considering efficiencies of both appliances). That's more than $300 back in my pocket, almost enough to cover the cost of one of my chain saws... in one week!

Before the insert I would burn about 50g oil in these cold spells. Wasn't keeping the house at 72 but if you're saving 90g in a week you must have been using a whole lot of oil in a year w/o a stove.

Can't say how much oil I'm saving guess I'll find out when all is said and done.
 
My plan was to reduce by 75-80%, I have matched that but its like an addiction. YOU want more, more, more, constantly trying to keep that furnace off in a battle against the heat. I had not run heat in like 3 seasons or so, had family over and they set my heat on my side of the house instead of thiers (I guess that they cant sleep in the 60's where the wife and I sweat at anything over like 65), I heard it kick on early Christmas mourn, I jumped out of the bed like the house was on fire and looked to see, and cut it off!! Funny thing is it was like 64 outside my room and they had set it to 68, I don't even keep it turned to heat its off!!!!!!
Funny, I get pi$$ed when I hear the furnace kick on too but my hands are tied. I didnt hear it all day yesterday then late last night it kicked on, looked at the thermo it read 13, it dipped below the magic 15.
 
Wasn't keeping the house at 72 but if you're saving 90g in a week you must have been using a whole lot of oil in a year w/o a stove.

Well, I wasn't keeping the house as warm around the clock with oil. I was keeping most of the house at 62F, only heating parts of it to 72F for two hours in the morning and four or five hours in the evening. I was looking at roughly 1400 gal/year, which is not bad, I think. With wood, you're sort of stuck maintaining whatever temp you want around the clock, as it's hard to get things warmed back up when they cool off, with a 60 - 80,000 BTU "space heater".
 
Well, I wasn't keeping the house as warm around the clock with oil. I was keeping most of the house at 62F, only heating parts of it to 72F for two hours in the morning and four or five hours in the evening. I was looking at roughly 1400 gal/year, which is not bad, I think. With wood, you're sort of stuck maintaining whatever temp you want around the clock, as it's hard to get things warmed back up when they cool off, with a 60 - 80,000 BTU "space heater".

That's a bill right there. Used 800-900 before the insert and was mostly cold. Tough when you're using all that oil and the house is still cold most of the time. I use less oil now and it's warm.
 
When it gets into the single digits, before we had our insert...our furnace would run 12-14 hours a day to keep the house at 68 (65 at night). Now on days like that, it might run 1-2 hours total for the day and our house never dips below 70-72 degree's - with the insert cranking away.

I'm very happy with the performance. Next year we will be getting our whole house insulated, so I can't wait to see how that improves things. Right now only our kitchen (remodel) and attic is insulated...all other exterior walls are wide open. House is brick exterior with plaster interior walls...
 
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You can always tell a cold spell because the site gets filled with these 'I cant keep up' threads. I think its just the nature of the beast, if we all installed stoves that would keep us toasty in these temps we would get baked out the rest of the season.

Its a balance...you gotta learn to build small, hot, fast burning fires from stuff like pine. And NOT reload too often, or you WILL get baked out! I am a little afraid of over insulating though, cuz shoulder season might get REALLY tricky then, lol.
 
My Quad 4100I insert does well enough, I doubt a free standing could do a lot more. Of course I'm running the circulation fan on full speed, an free standing might do as well without the fan... yes, while the Insert has a bay window that sticks about 8" into the room, most of the insert is inside the fireplace.

My house is an "all electric" built about 25 years ago. That means something like R38 in the ceiling and R15 in the walls - it is a two story 2000 sq foot house, with all double pain windows... not as good as newer, but these are Anderson so work pretty good. I still feel a cold draft on one side of the fireplace where I have a brick exterior wall and a wood bin with a door to the outside. The door is insulated and seals well, still with all that brick exposed to the outside with no insulation it is cold in the wood bin.

I don't run my Insert to its maximum, I normally run it with just enough in it to run a couple of hours, the I grab a couple more splits and put them in. Before bed I put in a couple of large spits, I'll gess each about 20 pounds, or about 120,000 BTU. This holds the Insert room about the 65 degree setting on my geothermal HP for up to 3 hours I estimate. I go to bed around midnight and when up at about 7 am the Insert is warm but the fan has shut down and it takes some effort to restart the fire... still enough hot coals to get it started, but I've used some paper/cardboard and a match most mornings. I can also remove some ash, and yes, coals. I have a metal ash bucket with a lid, and it can get rather hot form the hot coals so I don't lose all the heat with the bucket setting on my hearth.

Reading through the thread I'd like to drift off-topic to the point made my Hearth Mistress " best purchase I've made in a long time (other than my fiskars x27)." I've been thinking real hard about buying a Fiskar, I think the X27 has the 36" length. Given the "best purchase" rating I am encouraged. I have discuss the topic on Hearth Tool Shed, the right place, but I don't recall "seeing" Hearth Mistress there. My need is to split a few rounds too large and heavy to move to my house and electricity were I can use my small but effective electric log splitter. I have maul, axe, wedges but think a modern spitting axe might be a good move, seems other know so. I welcome off-thread correspondence on the subject.
 
If you're losing heat like that it's the house. It's probably not because it's an insert. My house is drafty, but sounds like you guys have me beat by a lot. Frozen windex, YIKES!

Because my house is so drafty, at BeGreen's advice I oversized my stove. So we've been able to keep the house warm even in these colder than average temps. We are lucky in the sense that our fireplace is centrally located. We do have electric space heaters in our bedrooms that we run to bring the temps up when needed.
 
Only time I really notice it hard to heat the house is when it's cold out, like close to -30*
 
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