Have the Osburn 2200 for a few years, used it here and there. Came to the cabin 1 week ago, used it for pretty much the only heat for a 2400 sqft house with vaulted ceilings so a lot of space. Been running almost a week straight with letting it go out a few times to clean the ashes. House temp has been kept around 65 during the days and its in the upper 50's in the morning. Inside was 45 when we got here, so its a lot of material and stone work to heat up. I think I am burning less now then when we got here to keep it about the same temps. I would call the insulation in the house mediocre at best. Outside its been on the low 20's at night, and low 40's during the day and cloudy and damp till today.
I have gone through a stack one row deep about 5 feet wide and 6 feet tall, logs between 12 and 16 inches split to various sizes. About 60% a very light soft wood that burns quick and 40% black locust that is like cement and burns slow and hot. All stored in a dry garage and aged for over a year.
Am I on course for a normal wood usage or using way to much. This is my first time truly heating the entire house for a week straight, and I have no clue about wood usage, but it seems like a lot when I see how much is gone from my stack.
PS I do have two new heat pumps I need to install, so in the future it will not be my main heat source, but for now it pretty much is.
I have gone through a stack one row deep about 5 feet wide and 6 feet tall, logs between 12 and 16 inches split to various sizes. About 60% a very light soft wood that burns quick and 40% black locust that is like cement and burns slow and hot. All stored in a dry garage and aged for over a year.
Am I on course for a normal wood usage or using way to much. This is my first time truly heating the entire house for a week straight, and I have no clue about wood usage, but it seems like a lot when I see how much is gone from my stack.
PS I do have two new heat pumps I need to install, so in the future it will not be my main heat source, but for now it pretty much is.