Uhm...Great point and, this should have been mentioned much earlier.
Post in thread 'Chinook 30 not heating the house' https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/chinook-30-not-heating-the-house.206445/post-2754815
Uhm...Great point and, this should have been mentioned much earlier.
Credit where credit is due. So much reading and so many threads. Somehow I missed this or plain dumb forgot.How high are the ceilings? 15 ft? (22 ft pipe)
Does all the heat pool near the ceiling (as physics dictates)?
If so, a ceiling fan may help (in the setting where it does not "blow downwards", but blows upwards; the warm air will then glide along the ceiling and then to the walls where it'll go down to replace the air being sucked up in the middle. This avoids sitting in the stream of air under a fan that blows down, which will lead one to feel colder than needs to be. (I know this does not negate your 59 F measurement, but it's useful nonetheless.)
Sure, I'm not disagreeing with your point. But "not enough wood" should be well within the grasp of anyone who's heated any house with any stove. This isn't exactly quantum physics.
I guess we will see! If this turns out to be the problem, someone'd better take away the neighbor's matches.
Yes, wonderful, wonderful, off gassing.that raging heat output that comes with the early stages of wood combustion.
I just stumbled across this thread and sorry, I haven't read it all.
It looks to me like the Chinook has a double-wall. I've got the older Princess, and it had removeable panels on the sides. I removed (or never installed) them. I don't know if that's possible with the Chinook or not. I have a feeling my Princess might not heat the house so well with the side panels installed, UNLESS I added the fan kit. Just a thought ...
Yeah, that all makes sense. I guess I just like the radiant heat - we both sit within 10ft of the stove. I'd kinda like to get a Chinook, but this gives me pause.I have the princess with side shields installed. The heat doesn't go away, it just is emitted to the room as hot air instead of radiant heat when side shields are installed. That's why stove efficiency is so high on the princess model, it delivers those btu to the room instead of up the stack.
Like that one guy that claimed the interior wall shields would make the stove inefficient. It just converts the heat from radiation to convection.
Are you saying the side shields increase efficiency? I thought radiant heat was more efficient than convection heat? Anyways it would be nice to have the option of removable shielding.I have the princess with side shields installed. The heat doesn't go away, it just is emitted to the room as hot air instead of radiant heat when side shields are installed. That's why stove efficiency is so high on the princess model, it delivers those btu to the room instead of up the stack.
Like that one guy that claimed the interior wall shields would make the stove inefficient. It just converts the heat from radiation to convection.
It's not, a BTU is a BTU. It feels different to humans, but that's about it. And there's still plenty of IR radiation coming off the front of the stove.I thought radiant heat was more efficient than convection heat?
No, just that having the side shields does not make the stove less efficient. The heat still makes it out as is reflected by the very high efficiency numbers on these BK stoves. We know the heat isn’t going up the chimney so it’s making it out despite the side shields.Are you saying the side shields increase efficiency? I thought radiant heat was more efficient than convection heat? Anyways it would be nice to have the option of removable shielding.
Yeah but the heat transfer efficiency has to be greater with an unshielded stove? Doesn’t the shielding somewhat insulate the stove and send more heat up the chimney? Unless there’s a blower attached as BKVP states above to move more air? I wonder how this is all figured out when tested?It's not, a BTU is a BTU. It feels different to humans, but that's about it. And there's still plenty of IR radiation coming off the front of the stove.
I live in a warm climate, and we rarely need to run the fan, the Chinook is more than adequate to provide sufficient heat.
And I like the safety aspect, the firebox is not exposed to the outside, so it's pretty difficult to burn yourself touching the running stove (except for the door, of course).
The current test method (FRM (Federal Reference Method)) M28R requires what is know as the fan confirmation method. The emissions results from this run are NOT part of the emissions grade. Instead, it is used to verify burn rates.Yeah but the heat transfer efficiency has to be greater with an unshielded stove? Doesn’t the shielding somewhat insulate the stove and send more heat up the chimney? Unless there’s a blower attached as BKVP states above to move more air? I wonder how this is all figured out when tested?
Doesn’t the shielding somewhat insulate the stove and send more heat up the chimney?
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