Hi all. I'm new to the forum but not new to stoves. I grew up with a Baron (couldn't ever find much about them, so they must not have been around too long) wood stove as the family's sole source of heat. My parents added on to their house later on and put in a smaller stove in that far corner. I can't recall the make as it was another one that doesn't seem to exist before, but it was very much along the lines of a Century S244 or any of the similar designs.
I am off on my own now and itching to get rid of the useless decorative FMI fireplace insert that is in my house. I'm lucky to keep the house at 60 with a roaring fire on a 20 degree day (and no other heat source turned on). I have been planning to install a stove and I now have time to do it. My house is pretty small at under 800 square feet. I may (highly unlikely) add on in a decade or so and make it closer to 1200 square feet. We get below zero here but not typically for more than a few days. This stove would most likely get used on weekends with little use during the week. I have resistance heating which works pretty well for my small place but I'd like to cut down my electricity bill and be able to properly heat the house if I lost power for a few days. I just plain enjoy burning wood, too. Overnight burning with the small firebox isn't a huge deal to me. Have it going well when you go to bed, and rebuild the fire in the morning when you wake up and I'm fine with that. And, to be honest, sometimes we get a 70 degree day in January, so it's not like I would even use it 100% of the winter if that were my plan. Anyway, enough with the background info.
Currently I am looking at the Vogelzang VG-1120L (Menards). I couldn't find many (any?) reviews of it. For the price it looks like about what you'd expect when I looked at it in-store. I think it would work for what I want it to do, unless someone has had a bad experience with it. I've also discovered that Pleasant Hearth has a 1200 square foot model that is over 75% efficient and thus qualifies for the current tax credit. I can't seem to find them available anywhere online so I may not even be able to track one down. Anyhow, my point is that for the ~$500 for the Vogelzang, I have some room to play with a slightly more expensive stove that meets the 75% efficiency requirement since you get a chunk of that back in the tax credit.
Should I be looking at any other stoves? The Vogelzang with all new chimney is going to be right around $1000, so let's say for the purposes of this discussion any stove that is over $1000 by itself is out of my range (that would be reduced to a cost of $740 once the 26% tax credit is received - again, no credit on the Vogelzang).
I am off on my own now and itching to get rid of the useless decorative FMI fireplace insert that is in my house. I'm lucky to keep the house at 60 with a roaring fire on a 20 degree day (and no other heat source turned on). I have been planning to install a stove and I now have time to do it. My house is pretty small at under 800 square feet. I may (highly unlikely) add on in a decade or so and make it closer to 1200 square feet. We get below zero here but not typically for more than a few days. This stove would most likely get used on weekends with little use during the week. I have resistance heating which works pretty well for my small place but I'd like to cut down my electricity bill and be able to properly heat the house if I lost power for a few days. I just plain enjoy burning wood, too. Overnight burning with the small firebox isn't a huge deal to me. Have it going well when you go to bed, and rebuild the fire in the morning when you wake up and I'm fine with that. And, to be honest, sometimes we get a 70 degree day in January, so it's not like I would even use it 100% of the winter if that were my plan. Anyway, enough with the background info.
Currently I am looking at the Vogelzang VG-1120L (Menards). I couldn't find many (any?) reviews of it. For the price it looks like about what you'd expect when I looked at it in-store. I think it would work for what I want it to do, unless someone has had a bad experience with it. I've also discovered that Pleasant Hearth has a 1200 square foot model that is over 75% efficient and thus qualifies for the current tax credit. I can't seem to find them available anywhere online so I may not even be able to track one down. Anyhow, my point is that for the ~$500 for the Vogelzang, I have some room to play with a slightly more expensive stove that meets the 75% efficiency requirement since you get a chunk of that back in the tax credit.
Should I be looking at any other stoves? The Vogelzang with all new chimney is going to be right around $1000, so let's say for the purposes of this discussion any stove that is over $1000 by itself is out of my range (that would be reduced to a cost of $740 once the 26% tax credit is received - again, no credit on the Vogelzang).