After reading these forums on an off for a few years and obsessively this past month, I'm doing my first post. (As a matter of fact, my first post ever on any discussion board.) Anyhow, after 15 winters of using my old VC Vigilant (1977), a state voucher is pushing me over the edge to get a new stove. Clearance issues on my corner (quarter circle, 58" radius to brick, see attachment) hearth has me restricted to the Napoleon Banf 1100, P.E. Alderlea T4, or Quadrafire Explorer I. (As far as I can find out there.) I think it'd be a push, without hearth addition to increase to the 1400, T5, or II. We'd like to maintain the cast iron look.
I'm hoping to get any opinions contrasting these stoves and their corporate backing against one another. I'm beginning to conclude the companies are all reputable and the stoves good, so perhaps it just comes down to aesthetics.
I live on the Oregon/CA border on the coast, so our winters are wet and cool, say 5 or so degrees warmer than Seattle. Redwood tree shade, but no snow. 1800 ft home 2 story, salt house style home. Overnight burns aren't critical. I typically have done small hot fires with seasoned oak in the Vigilant with the occasional baffle shut for the big days, but I'm truly looking forward to not it every 25 minutes and running outside to see if I'm burning clean. And of course being modern with fire code...
I'm hoping to get any opinions contrasting these stoves and their corporate backing against one another. I'm beginning to conclude the companies are all reputable and the stoves good, so perhaps it just comes down to aesthetics.
I live on the Oregon/CA border on the coast, so our winters are wet and cool, say 5 or so degrees warmer than Seattle. Redwood tree shade, but no snow. 1800 ft home 2 story, salt house style home. Overnight burns aren't critical. I typically have done small hot fires with seasoned oak in the Vigilant with the occasional baffle shut for the big days, but I'm truly looking forward to not it every 25 minutes and running outside to see if I'm burning clean. And of course being modern with fire code...
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