All triggered by a hearthstone heritage pre-cat coming up for sale locally. I hadn't even been thinking of a new stove. That's in this thread:
I decided not to get the used Hearthstone Heritage.
So in all this I got looking around a bit, and it seems the Woodstock Progress is a stove everyone loves. I also hadn't realized Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill" is going to kill the tax credit for efficient stoves this December. I had always thought I had until 2032 to get a modern stove, but it seems the time is now. So in spite of finances being tight and having a decent if ancient stove (I rebuilt it maybe 6 or 7 years ago), I'm really thinking about the Progress to replace the Jotul 3CB. I'm going to call Woodstock today to talk to them. They are only about 25 minute drive from me, so I'm not sure if there could be some shipping delivery option that works. Maybe even a U haul with some kind of lift?
My house is funny. The room I'm heating is only 800 sq feet, an 1860s one room schoolhouse (with upstairs bedroom) and addition. with insulation as good as I can get but still not great. The house has an addition tacked onto it, but we hang out, cook, sleep in the 28 x 28 schoolhouse. Heat demand is not too outrageous until it is. When it gets cold, the addition on the house, which we also keep cooler, starts to really suck away the heat from the main room. At zero or below, heat demand increases more like exponentially than any kind of linear function. Vermont. The Jotul is pretty good, but it can get overfired. My wife doesn't always give serious woodstove attention, if she feeds it. We're used to a "get the tin can hot quick" style of wood heat, keeping the room cooler and then making a fire when we need it. In this way I only burn about a cord or cord and a half of dry hardwood per year. I'm not interested in burning more, and in fact at my age burning wood might not be viable for all that many years in the future. My wife already has arthritis in her wrists and other problems with her wrists.
So, advantages to the Woodstock Progress over the Jotul:
More durable
More heat output when we really need it
More efficient
New
Longer fire holding overnight could take some load off the mini split and save some electricity.
Probably less fiddly to operate. (I don't think my wife would be offended if I said she simply doesn't pay as much attention to the adjustments of the stove as I do, or as would be ideal. She'll put some logs in and get lost in her novel or walk away without thinking about it. Me, I'm almost always very conscious of what the stove is doing or needs, but I'm also just a human and get distracted sometimes. Still, I can't think of anyone I know personally who would be better at paying attention to it than I am. All of which is to say that sometimes if pretty rarely the Jotul takes off a bit, especially in really cold weather with a lot of coals and a strong draft.)
Disadvantages to Hearthstone Progress:
We already have the Jotul, and the Progress will be a pain to install at that weight
We are used to the Jotul and the heat-up-quick style of the iron stove
Progress would be slower to get warm when we wake up to a cool/cold room (or use more wood to keep the stove burning all night
(the mini-split is the back drop overnight, holding the room at some not too freezing temp until we wake up and get a fire going)
$$$ for stove purchase, but better deal before the Trump cuts kill that deal anyway
Cost to replace the Cat periodically
Ordering the Progress puts us prime sale period for offloading the Jotul
Two things the Progress seems to have going for it in spite of being a massive stove, from what I've read in forums: It can put out heat reasonably quickly because of the big glass, and it can really get going fast. So of all stone/massive stoves, it's not the worse by any means for our use pattern. Also it might change our use pattern by being better at a different style.
I'm a bit unclear on the Progress output. I've seen 80,000 BTU but I've also seen 47,xxx. At the latter number, it's barely more than the Jotul 3CB? In which case why upgrade? But I think it's also clear that at max output the Jotul is on the hairy edge of overfiring and getting damaged. When I rebuilt the Jotul it had clearly been overfired, but I got it used and I know the baffle had just been replaced when I bought it. (Baffle is still perfect now after over 10 years here). I don't know if the old stress only showed up when we had it or if we were responsible for the overfire damage. The inner iron on the Jotul was in pretty bad shape when I rebuilt it.
I'm hesitant to burn more wood to keep a fire going a bit overnight (impossible with the current Jotul here) but on the other hand not building a fire from scratch and kindling every morning seems like it would be nice.
As I mentioned in the other thread, we have a mini split for this downstairs room, a cold weather model, but it was intended as a shoulder season solution. I mean, it's practically free to run the heat pump at temps in the 40s, and not too bad down to freezing. Below that and we have to pound it harder and it can start to use some real electricity. Below zero it doesn't have enough heat on its own and uses lots of electricity. (We also have an oil boiler, which keeps the addition from freezing and powers up the rooms there when we use them. We can get some heat from the boiler into the schoolhouse of course, but like everyone on these forums, we'd rather not burn oil.) In Vermont we can in theory have stretches like 20 below, and that used to be extremely common. We used to have weeks where it barely got above zero. Oh man, I remember the 70s and 80s here, even the 90s, but we rarely have cold stretches like we used to. I mean, a week of zero-ish temps or below used to be extremely common and now it's more rare. But still possible. And even longer and colder stretches could still be possible, but I haven't seen it for a good handful of years now. All of which is to say that a stretch like that would be pretty rough on the Jotul, heat stress wise.
My woodshed holds about 2.5 or 3 cords I think, and the way I do is: it's filled by summer or fall, half of it is the really dry wood I didn't burn last winter, and half of it is new wood I'll burn not this winter but next. This works out. The less dry wood is in reserve. Some winters I'll tuck into that by spring, while some winters I don't even burn all the dry wood. But basically half the wood per winter. Burning more wood would mess up this system, and I'd be burning wood not as dry. So I don't want to "upgrade" and end up burning more wood. Not sure if the slightly less efficient tin can approach with heat-on-demand saves over the more efficient keep-it-warm approach. We're pretty thrifty with wood, light a fire for breakfast on a cold morning, let the stove go out, light it up again late afternoon for evening around the fire.
Thoughts from Progress (or Woodstock) owners appreciated!
The F3CB is a great little stove. The Heritage will provide longer burntime and a different, softer heat than the radiant heat. Perhaps the thought is that...Why sell the Jotul ASAP? Because it’s hard to control? Because modern stoves are better than the 3CB?
Also I think my flue is actually 6”! It’s pretty tall though. I don’t know exactly how tall it is, but I’ve been up to the top of it on a ladder (I used to clean it but my wife wants a pro, doesn’t want me up there). I get really heebie jeebie up that high, is how high it is, and I’ve spent a fair bit of time on high ladders!
I decided not to get the used Hearthstone Heritage.
So in all this I got looking around a bit, and it seems the Woodstock Progress is a stove everyone loves. I also hadn't realized Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill" is going to kill the tax credit for efficient stoves this December. I had always thought I had until 2032 to get a modern stove, but it seems the time is now. So in spite of finances being tight and having a decent if ancient stove (I rebuilt it maybe 6 or 7 years ago), I'm really thinking about the Progress to replace the Jotul 3CB. I'm going to call Woodstock today to talk to them. They are only about 25 minute drive from me, so I'm not sure if there could be some shipping delivery option that works. Maybe even a U haul with some kind of lift?
My house is funny. The room I'm heating is only 800 sq feet, an 1860s one room schoolhouse (with upstairs bedroom) and addition. with insulation as good as I can get but still not great. The house has an addition tacked onto it, but we hang out, cook, sleep in the 28 x 28 schoolhouse. Heat demand is not too outrageous until it is. When it gets cold, the addition on the house, which we also keep cooler, starts to really suck away the heat from the main room. At zero or below, heat demand increases more like exponentially than any kind of linear function. Vermont. The Jotul is pretty good, but it can get overfired. My wife doesn't always give serious woodstove attention, if she feeds it. We're used to a "get the tin can hot quick" style of wood heat, keeping the room cooler and then making a fire when we need it. In this way I only burn about a cord or cord and a half of dry hardwood per year. I'm not interested in burning more, and in fact at my age burning wood might not be viable for all that many years in the future. My wife already has arthritis in her wrists and other problems with her wrists.
So, advantages to the Woodstock Progress over the Jotul:
More durable
More heat output when we really need it
More efficient
New
Longer fire holding overnight could take some load off the mini split and save some electricity.
Probably less fiddly to operate. (I don't think my wife would be offended if I said she simply doesn't pay as much attention to the adjustments of the stove as I do, or as would be ideal. She'll put some logs in and get lost in her novel or walk away without thinking about it. Me, I'm almost always very conscious of what the stove is doing or needs, but I'm also just a human and get distracted sometimes. Still, I can't think of anyone I know personally who would be better at paying attention to it than I am. All of which is to say that sometimes if pretty rarely the Jotul takes off a bit, especially in really cold weather with a lot of coals and a strong draft.)
Disadvantages to Hearthstone Progress:
We already have the Jotul, and the Progress will be a pain to install at that weight
We are used to the Jotul and the heat-up-quick style of the iron stove
Progress would be slower to get warm when we wake up to a cool/cold room (or use more wood to keep the stove burning all night
(the mini-split is the back drop overnight, holding the room at some not too freezing temp until we wake up and get a fire going)
$$$ for stove purchase, but better deal before the Trump cuts kill that deal anyway
Cost to replace the Cat periodically
Ordering the Progress puts us prime sale period for offloading the Jotul
Two things the Progress seems to have going for it in spite of being a massive stove, from what I've read in forums: It can put out heat reasonably quickly because of the big glass, and it can really get going fast. So of all stone/massive stoves, it's not the worse by any means for our use pattern. Also it might change our use pattern by being better at a different style.
I'm a bit unclear on the Progress output. I've seen 80,000 BTU but I've also seen 47,xxx. At the latter number, it's barely more than the Jotul 3CB? In which case why upgrade? But I think it's also clear that at max output the Jotul is on the hairy edge of overfiring and getting damaged. When I rebuilt the Jotul it had clearly been overfired, but I got it used and I know the baffle had just been replaced when I bought it. (Baffle is still perfect now after over 10 years here). I don't know if the old stress only showed up when we had it or if we were responsible for the overfire damage. The inner iron on the Jotul was in pretty bad shape when I rebuilt it.
I'm hesitant to burn more wood to keep a fire going a bit overnight (impossible with the current Jotul here) but on the other hand not building a fire from scratch and kindling every morning seems like it would be nice.
As I mentioned in the other thread, we have a mini split for this downstairs room, a cold weather model, but it was intended as a shoulder season solution. I mean, it's practically free to run the heat pump at temps in the 40s, and not too bad down to freezing. Below that and we have to pound it harder and it can start to use some real electricity. Below zero it doesn't have enough heat on its own and uses lots of electricity. (We also have an oil boiler, which keeps the addition from freezing and powers up the rooms there when we use them. We can get some heat from the boiler into the schoolhouse of course, but like everyone on these forums, we'd rather not burn oil.) In Vermont we can in theory have stretches like 20 below, and that used to be extremely common. We used to have weeks where it barely got above zero. Oh man, I remember the 70s and 80s here, even the 90s, but we rarely have cold stretches like we used to. I mean, a week of zero-ish temps or below used to be extremely common and now it's more rare. But still possible. And even longer and colder stretches could still be possible, but I haven't seen it for a good handful of years now. All of which is to say that a stretch like that would be pretty rough on the Jotul, heat stress wise.
My woodshed holds about 2.5 or 3 cords I think, and the way I do is: it's filled by summer or fall, half of it is the really dry wood I didn't burn last winter, and half of it is new wood I'll burn not this winter but next. This works out. The less dry wood is in reserve. Some winters I'll tuck into that by spring, while some winters I don't even burn all the dry wood. But basically half the wood per winter. Burning more wood would mess up this system, and I'd be burning wood not as dry. So I don't want to "upgrade" and end up burning more wood. Not sure if the slightly less efficient tin can approach with heat-on-demand saves over the more efficient keep-it-warm approach. We're pretty thrifty with wood, light a fire for breakfast on a cold morning, let the stove go out, light it up again late afternoon for evening around the fire.
Thoughts from Progress (or Woodstock) owners appreciated!