- Oct 3, 2007
- 1,539
Been a long time since I've posted because I haven't been burning much wood lately. Back in the fall we moved to a house with hot water baseboard heat. We are renting our old house where our Englander 28-3500 furnace sits idle in the basement. I am not comfortable with allowing the tenants to use it and they are fine with just paying for oil anyway. Eventually I would like to pull it out of there and use it here somewhere, but of course we don't have the infrastructure (ductwork) in the house. I do have a barn I could heat with it, but I had another thought. Our new house is about 2600 square feet with a very open layout on the first floor. There is an old (manufacturer unknown) wood/coal stove in the kitchen/dining room area vented to stainless steel Class A chimney in good condition. It's an ugly old stove with no window and it looks to be in rough shape inside so I'm inclined to get rid of it no matter what.
The Englander, of course has a decent 8x8 window and will throw a ton of heat. I'm considering removing the blower altogether and just allowing it to radiate heat through the plenum out the top (maybe fashion a decorative "chimney cap" out of heating duct to give it a finished look) since the layout is completely open downstairs. The area where the stove is situated is also not far from the staircase to the second floor so I may even get some convection up to there as well. Regardless, the first and second floors are on separate zones so at the very least I could probably keep the first floor zone from kicking on most of the time with the Englander running.
My basis for all of this is that Englander does state in their manual that in the event of a power outage the furnace may be safely vented to open air, so I would think that if it were just not connected to duct work to begin with that it would be safe assuming that all other clearances, etc...were followed. I will call Englander tomorrow to get their opinion, but figured I'd run it by everyone here as well. The alternative would be that I could install it in the basement (would require extending the chimney, but not the end of the world) with the blower intact and simply leave the plenum vented to open air in the hopes that the heat would radiate to the first floor. Down the road I could install some floor vents as well.
The Englander, of course has a decent 8x8 window and will throw a ton of heat. I'm considering removing the blower altogether and just allowing it to radiate heat through the plenum out the top (maybe fashion a decorative "chimney cap" out of heating duct to give it a finished look) since the layout is completely open downstairs. The area where the stove is situated is also not far from the staircase to the second floor so I may even get some convection up to there as well. Regardless, the first and second floors are on separate zones so at the very least I could probably keep the first floor zone from kicking on most of the time with the Englander running.
My basis for all of this is that Englander does state in their manual that in the event of a power outage the furnace may be safely vented to open air, so I would think that if it were just not connected to duct work to begin with that it would be safe assuming that all other clearances, etc...were followed. I will call Englander tomorrow to get their opinion, but figured I'd run it by everyone here as well. The alternative would be that I could install it in the basement (would require extending the chimney, but not the end of the world) with the blower intact and simply leave the plenum vented to open air in the hopes that the heat would radiate to the first floor. Down the road I could install some floor vents as well.