FROM PREVIOUS THREAD:
[quote author="Den" date="1330977061"]Ah, the ol' "useful output" debate. I dunno how much it's worth. . .I just like it when my stove stays warm and waits patiently for me to come and stoke it, rather than going cold after the fire is gone. [/quote]
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I don't know of anyone that would consider 100-140 degrees useful. Starting up a soapstone at sub-150 degree temps is pretty much a cold start. I don't care if it can sit at that temp for 20 hours, it is no different than sitting at room temp.
The Heritage will stay over 300 degrees for 4-6 hours. It will remain warm for up to 8 hours. After that, the stove is sitting at 100-140 degrees. I find this to be not much different than a cast iron stove.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			[quote author="Den" date="1330977061"]Ah, the ol' "useful output" debate. I dunno how much it's worth. . .I just like it when my stove stays warm and waits patiently for me to come and stoke it, rather than going cold after the fire is gone.
 [/quote]
[/quote]I don't know of anyone that would consider 100-140 degrees useful. Starting up a soapstone at sub-150 degree temps is pretty much a cold start. I don't care if it can sit at that temp for 20 hours, it is no different than sitting at room temp.
The Heritage will stay over 300 degrees for 4-6 hours. It will remain warm for up to 8 hours. After that, the stove is sitting at 100-140 degrees. I find this to be not much different than a cast iron stove.
 
	 
	 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		