GG Woody
Feeling the Heat
I'd try without.Since the stove is facing the stairwell, would you recommend the stove fan?
It looks like the fan would be a 20 minute install in the future if you change your mind.
I'd try without.Since the stove is facing the stairwell, would you recommend the stove fan?
Let me say, 90% of the folks that claim to "need" more heat buy the fans. The peak performance is with fans on cold days, fans off in shoulder season.An update: As I mentioned earlier I did get the Ashford 30.2 placed on order yesterday. I was told 3-4 week lead time. Hopefully that is still accurate. Otherwise, if I'm going miss the tax credit, I would probably cancel the order until my basement is completely finished. I was hesitant to order the stove and have to work around it, but couldn't pass up the tax credit. I'll let you know. Its going to be a stressful 3-4 weeks just waiting for shipment.
If you’re trying to heat more than 1700-2000 sq ft you will find yourself at least once a year need the fan.Since the stove is facing the stairwell, would you recommend the stove fan? Or again, I guess I could try without it and see. I do think natural convection will move it up the stairs. Or like you said, the stairs would act as a cold air return with a register above the stove. But after some of the comments about noise and fire safety, I think I'd rather not install registers above the stove. Good idea with the toilet paper
Sounds like I'll probably be wanting a fan on some of those cold days. But they look pretty easy to install myself if I don't just get one right away. Thanks for the input.Let me say, 90% of the folks that claim to "need" more heat buy the fans. The peak performance is with fans on cold days, fans off in shoulder season.
BKVP
If you want to send heat upstairs you want the blower, which converts some of the radiant heat in the stove body into heated air, making it available to be moved upstairs.I do think natural convection will move it up the stairs. Or like you said, the stairs would act as a cold air return with a register above the stove.
And you get the tax credit if you aren’t over the 2k limit yetIf you want to send heat upstairs you want the blower, which converts some of the radiant heat in the stove body into heated air, making it available to be moved upstairs.
Do you think it would no longer apply for tax credit without the blower???And you get the tax credit if you aren’t over the 2k limit yet
Blower will not affect eligibility. If you get the blower this year you get 30% off its price. If you haven’t spent 6k yet.Do you think it would no longer apply for tax credit without the blower???
We are doing our absolute best!Sounds like I'll probably be wanting a fan on some of those cold days. But they look pretty easy to install myself if I don't just get one right away. Thanks for the input.
Any thoughts if 3-4 weeks to ship an Ashford 30.2 sounds possible. I don't know if you guys ship direct to dealers or if the store I'm working with gets them from a distributor.
Also, the tax credit is for stove but not venting, hearth pad or labor. If the fans get installed by dealer, I would think they are part of the stove.We are doing our absolute best!
PM me the dealer name.
BKVP
Its my first woodstove. So I'm getting the whole install done. My bid is almost $12,000. I'm not having any issue spending enough money to get the max creditBlower will not affect eligibility. If you get the blower this year you get 30% off its price. If you haven’t spent 6k yet.
. But thanks. Its good to be reminded of these things to get all the tax credit I can.Oh! I thought I read the tax credit covered the install as well. I'll need to look into this. If your correct, I'll just get the blower right away.Also, the tax credit is for stove but not venting, hearth pad or labor. If the fans get installed by dealer, I would think they are part of the stove.
BKVP
I have on order a metallic black Ashford 30.2 from Sunrooms Plus, Inc in Grand Forks ND. Anything you can do to help my order ship would be greatly appreciated. I'm sitting on pins and needles hereWe are doing our absolute best!
PM me the dealer name.
BKVP
Thank you!I understand. I'd appreciate even just knowing the estimated ship date. Also could you check to see if any of the other colors would ship sooner. Thanks, I appreciate.I cannot expedite your order, but can get best idea of shipping date.
Thank you.All orders are first come, first served. Color isn't material. Our stock is gone on AF30's so we have yet to make your stove.
I'll get back to you.
BKVP
Thanks. Wood is going to be a challenge this year. Due to a busy summer, I didn't get anything pre-cut and seasoned. I don't even have a shelter setup to store it in. So I'll be purchasing something this fall that hopefully has been decently seasoned and covering it with a tarp. Next summer I'll be busy with wood. My lack of diligence on the wood this year is a big part of why I was really leaning toward the non-cat. I'm sure you'll see a new thread on this at some point after everything is setup.Congratulations. It may be time to start a new thread. Now, the question is wood supply. Modern stoves want dry, fully seasoned firewood,
I would get manufactured fuels (logs and bricks typically) and look for clean pallets. They are often made of oak. Just burn the slats, no nails!Thanks. Wood is going to be a challenge this year. Due to a busy summer, I didn't get anything pre-cut and seasoned. I don't even have a shelter setup to store it in. So I'll be purchasing something this fall that hopefully has been decently seasoned and covering it with a tarp. Next summer I'll be busy with wood. My lack of diligence on the wood this year is a big part of why I was really leaning toward the non-cat. I'm sure you'll see a new thread on this at some point after everything is setup.
@Fargo some sellers have kiln dried wood down to the desired moisture percentage. Not just "zapped" for a few hours to kill off insect infestations.If you have to buy wood for next year buy it now so it has the whole summer to season. Every wood seller says that their wood is dry enough to burn but in reality it rarely is true.
Consider a ton or two as part of the stove install. Nothing suck more than trying to burn wet wood in a brand new stove.I would get manufactured fuels (logs and bricks typically) and look for clean pallets. They are often made of oak. Just burn the slats, no nails!
BKVP
Thank you for checking.Yes the order is in the que.
There are several in line, but we should ship before Dec 18th, 2025. We will do our best!
BKVP
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