Howdy ya'll. So as I mentioned in a previous post, the pot I was boiling on top of my wood stove for humidity control crapped out last week (handle fell off and spilled water all over the place and made a mess yada yada yada), so I went out today and bought a nice big 16 quart stock pot with a heavy duty steel reinforced bottom on it as a replacement. But once I got home I got thinking (that's usually when the trouble starts).
So the temp outside is around -26C (-15F) and the heat pump is struggling to keep the house at 20C (68F) without the auxiliary heat kicking in (read as baseboard heat on steroids, watch dollar bills flying out windows) and I just want to get the stove good and hot to take some of the load off the heat pump. And this makes me think, now if I go and plonk this big piece of steel full of water on top of the stove, isn't it going to be absorbing all sorts of thermal energy and basically rob me and the house of critical BTU's that could be heating up the house, just when I need them most????
Anybody ever think of this?
PS, the pot still sitting on the coffee table, and the stove is cranking out some much needed heat at the moment.....
So the temp outside is around -26C (-15F) and the heat pump is struggling to keep the house at 20C (68F) without the auxiliary heat kicking in (read as baseboard heat on steroids, watch dollar bills flying out windows) and I just want to get the stove good and hot to take some of the load off the heat pump. And this makes me think, now if I go and plonk this big piece of steel full of water on top of the stove, isn't it going to be absorbing all sorts of thermal energy and basically rob me and the house of critical BTU's that could be heating up the house, just when I need them most????
Anybody ever think of this?
PS, the pot still sitting on the coffee table, and the stove is cranking out some much needed heat at the moment.....