Hearthstone Mansfield vs regency 3500 cat

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Davek134

Member
Jan 15, 2016
11
Nj
Have old earth stove

Looking for advice. I want to replace my old stove. Getting 4 hr burn times . Looking for stove to keep burning all day while at work and threw night. 2000 sq ft house

Local sales is pushing hearthstone Mansfield $3300 non cat soap stone

I was online looking at regency 3500 cat $3k

Has to be front loading

Some people are highly positive on the cat s and some on non cats.

I would like this purchase to last long time Not really caring about addition cost of maintainence

What are your recommendations ? Benefits for booth
 
Have old earth stove

Looking for advice. I want to replace my old stove. Getting 4 hr burn times . Looking for stove to keep burning all day while at work and threw night. 2000 sq ft house

Local sales is pushing hearthstone Mansfield $3300 non cat soap stone

I was online looking at regency 3500 cat $3k

Has to be front loading

Some people are highly positive on the cat s and some on non cats.

I would like this purchase to last long time Not really caring about addition cost of maintainence

What are your recommendations ? Benefits for booth
Go with a blaze king princess.
 
I own a Hearthstone Mansfield and I am very happy with my stove. I have a home similarly sized to yours (approximately 1,800 square feet) and my stove is installed in a den in the corner of the room on the end of the house. This stove has no problem throwing heat and easily heats the entire house.

Further more, unlike one would most likely conclude, there is NOT an overbearing heat/temperature level in the room where the stove is located. It is very hard to explain if you have never experienced heat from a soapstone stove, but the heat is much more "gentle" and not as "extreme" or overbearing as steel or cast iron. The soapstone also radiates stored heat long after the fire dies down; with dry wood, I am continuously able to achieve 10 hours between reloads.

I have no experience running a Cat stove and I am unable to make any assumptions or comments reference to this. However, I have run two non-cat stoves and found them very simple and user friendly (even the wife can do it without too much oversight!).

Good luck in your decision; just my $0.02.
 
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Ok I will look into them. There is only 1 guy who authorize to buy them
So I will have to take a ride

The fire box is little small ?
 
The Regency is a hybrid, does both secondary and cat burn. I think it's a smaller version of their F5100. This type of stove interests me, since I'm a cat guy. I don't recall seeing reports on the F3500 yet but I know several folks on here burn the 5100. Maybe use the excellent search function here to find hands-on reports. If you want to drink the BK Kool-Aid, there are plenty of enablers here. ;)
 
You also have to take into consideration how well your house is buttoned up and insulated etc. We purchased a Mansfield this year and really like it compared to our last stove. We have a log cabin and the main floor is 1250 sf and the upstairs the same. Our stove is in the center of the house on the main floor. Our problem is that our windows are drafty. When it gets truly cold out, like teens and below, the stove only throws out "useable" heat for a couple hours at best. Its not the stoves fault, its ours due to the windows but its something to consider. The area the stove is in is wide open. On the cold days, you can be sitting across the room and its not warm by any stretch of the imagination. Burn times are relative I think. People that throw out 10 hours of burn time must be including when the stovetop temps get down to 250-300? In our house, thats not useable heat unless you are standing next to the stove.
 
Our windows are pretty tight. Very little draft in house

I really like the Mansfield but I want make sure it's right decision.

I am not opposed to the blaze king

250- 300 maintains heat in my house
 
What size chimney do you have now on your old stove? If its an 8 inch, BK does make a King model that is 4+ CF
 
If you have 8" i would go with the king of the 5100. Yes they are big but you can shut them back hard and have looooooong burn times.
 
My concern with blaze king is small fire box 2.85

The usable fire box size is about 2.8 on the Mansfield. Not sure on the princess but there close enough. And the bk is far more efficient. If you can stomach the looks.

I'm on my 5th trouble free season with the Mansfield. Its a good stove. There are better ones out there imo. But it heata this drafty house just fine.
 
The Regency is a hybrid, does both secondary and cat burn. I think it's a smaller version of their F5100. This type of stove interests me, since I'm a cat guy. I don't recall seeing reports on the F3500 yet but I know several folks on here burn the 5100. Maybe use the excellent search function here to find hands-on reports. If you want to drink the BK Kool-Aid, there are plenty of enablers here. ;)
[Hearth.com] Hearthstone Mansfield vs regency 3500 cat
 
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My concern with blaze king is small fire box 2.85

Don't get to hung up on the fire box size. Blaze kings can achieve an unbelievably long burn. Just ask anybody who Doesn't own one
 
Don't get to hung up on the fire box size. Blaze kings can achieve an unbelievably long burn. Just ask anybody who Doesn't own one
Yes even with a small box you can get long burns but at a low heat output. It all depends how much heat you need.
 
Yes even with a small box you can get long burns but at a low heat output. It all depends how much heat you need.

The op put an emphasise on burn times. I don't think he could beat a cat stove in that respect. Very respectable burn times while cranking out serious heat also. It would be up to the op to decide if a Princess or whatever else was a fit for his home but I don't think he should dismiss it because of the firebox size. It's not a "small" firebox by any means and I think the op will be surprised at the burn times that a cat stove of that size can offer.
 
The op put an emphasise on burn times. I don't think he could beat a cat stove in that respect.
Well he wants a stove that will burn all day while he is at work. Most larger stoves will do that. But if you will notice i suggested 2 cat stoves that would match his chimney size. I am not against cat stoves but as the firebox size goes down yes you can still get long burns but the heat output of those burns is going to be reduced. There is still only a certain amount of available heat in that wood a cat does not change that.
 
MANSFIELD 8012
WOOD

Heats up to: 2,500 sq. ft.
Firebox Capacity: 3.2 cu. ft.
Size: Up to 80,000 BTUs
EPA Certified: 2.9 grams per hour
Efficiency: 77.4% (Low Heating Value)
Burn Time: Up to 10 hours
HeatLife: Up to 14 hours
Maximum Log Length: 21″
 
Well he wants a stove that will burn all day while he is at work. Most larger stoves will do that. But if you will notice i suggested 2 cat stoves that would match his chimney size. I am not against cat stoves but as the firebox size goes down yes you can still get long burns but the heat output of those burns is going to be reduced. There is still only a certain amount of available heat in that wood a cat does not change that.

Come on man, you know better. It's not about trying to increase the amount of available heat in wood. It's about how much of that available heat you can keep in your home. A cat helps a great deal with that.

Saying that a cat doesn't change the amount of available heat in a load of wood is like standing beside a 1977 Trans-Am and saying a modern car doesn't change the amount of energy in a gallon of gas.
 
Come on man, you know better. It's not about trying to increase the amount of available heat in wood. It's about how much of that available heat you can keep in your home. A cat helps a great deal with that.

Saying that a cat doesn't change the amount of available heat in a load of wood is like standing beside a 1977 Trans-Am and saying a modern car doesn't change the amount of energy in a gallon of gas.
Yes it is a little more efficient than other non cats but not that much i am sorry it does not increase the heat given off of a given amount of wood that much. And especially for those of us that are always burning at higher heat output levels cats dont make as much sense. They are good stoves and in some situations they are the right stove but not for everyone.
 
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