I have learned a great deal from reading the posts on the hearth.com the past few weeks. Most of which was reiterating what I had already heard or knew to be true but also a lot of good ideas that I had never thought of before (ie - a blockoff plate).
My goal this heating season is to rely solely on my energy king insert as my families heat source. Will I make it? I don't know. Nights like tonight make me wonder, it is 16 F out right now and the temp in the house is very difficult to motivate this evening. 72 in the back of the house near the insert and 66 in the front furthest from the insert. It is atwo story house with 9' ceilings and 2700 sq feet. I split about 6 cords of the best oak last March from a local veneer company that sells it to me for $30.00 for a 16' trailer full. Some is dry 15-20% MC but a good deal didnt receive enough sunlight/wind despite a record hot and dry summer here. As a result some of the oak is 22-28% and isn't even worth trying to burn unless I mix it with a good amount of dry wood. I also have a cord of some of extremely dry maple that is really helping.
My main concern are the Jan/Feb nights ahead where zero degree weather is lurking. judging from previous years, unless i get the house temps in the upper 70's during the day my house just loses too much heat during the night hours, usually about 5 degrees, but more on the coldes nights. What would be the most beneficial for me? Insulate more? Add a blockoff plate? The house is about 15 years old insulated pretty well but a lot of windows. I refuse to pay for propane unless it gets below 63 in the house and no hope for getting it up in a few hours. I did let it drop to 56 when we were out of twon for the weekend a few weeks ago but it was easy to get it back up to temps with the warm weather when we returned. Whare the suggestions from the experts that have been doing this for years?
My goal this heating season is to rely solely on my energy king insert as my families heat source. Will I make it? I don't know. Nights like tonight make me wonder, it is 16 F out right now and the temp in the house is very difficult to motivate this evening. 72 in the back of the house near the insert and 66 in the front furthest from the insert. It is atwo story house with 9' ceilings and 2700 sq feet. I split about 6 cords of the best oak last March from a local veneer company that sells it to me for $30.00 for a 16' trailer full. Some is dry 15-20% MC but a good deal didnt receive enough sunlight/wind despite a record hot and dry summer here. As a result some of the oak is 22-28% and isn't even worth trying to burn unless I mix it with a good amount of dry wood. I also have a cord of some of extremely dry maple that is really helping.
My main concern are the Jan/Feb nights ahead where zero degree weather is lurking. judging from previous years, unless i get the house temps in the upper 70's during the day my house just loses too much heat during the night hours, usually about 5 degrees, but more on the coldes nights. What would be the most beneficial for me? Insulate more? Add a blockoff plate? The house is about 15 years old insulated pretty well but a lot of windows. I refuse to pay for propane unless it gets below 63 in the house and no hope for getting it up in a few hours. I did let it drop to 56 when we were out of twon for the weekend a few weeks ago but it was easy to get it back up to temps with the warm weather when we returned. Whare the suggestions from the experts that have been doing this for years?