Interested in how many tons you used and how many sqft you heat with your pellet stove.
Also how it compares usage wise with the years prior.
Thanks!
Also how it compares usage wise with the years prior.
Thanks!
Las year I went through close to 4 ton along with 80 gallons of fuel. This year I've gone through 15 bags. I'm only burning at night to keep the chill off. My place is small at 1200 sq.ft.Interested in how many tons you used and how many sqft you heat with your pellet stove.
Also how it compares usage wise with the years prior.
Thanks!
4 Tons 1800 sq.ft....could of used a little moreInterested in how many tons you used and how many sqft you heat with your pellet stove.
Also how it compares usage wise with the years prior.
Thanks!
Ya, we use nearly double what the dealers tend to indicate LOL ! But you have to consider locations, specific winters etc. Last winter was a tough one everywhere, it was cold, stormy and long. It was a winter where even here on Cape Cod we were burning in late Oct, where often it's not till mid Dec. The winter before wasn't much better. Here on Cape Cod we can have a mild winter or typical severe New England winters in the mid season of winter. I've seen open water on the ponds here some winters, and others 16" of ice.. Even so, A lot of these super high pellet users are in mountains, up in Canada, Minnesota, Northern Maine, NH mountains etc..Wow. some of these are much higher than I was expecting!
Thanks and keep sharing. : )
You're lucky on your propane pricing. Here on Cape Cod it's over $4 a gallon. I thought of a gas stove but no way. I took out a coal stove, maybe should have left it in or bought a newer more efficient coal stoker.. At the time there was no rice coal in our area but now Tractor Supply carries it. Who knew !I went through almost 7 ton last season, heating 3300 square feet. That was burning 24/7, and without the furnace kicking on one single time over the entire Winter. House is 10 years old, well insulated, very open, and my P68 sits in the corner of my family room. With the price of pellets continuously on the rise, and the fact that propane is so inexpensive (for me), I've opted not to burn pellets this season. I will probably fire up the pellet stove a few times here and there (for ambiance only), but I'm not buying pellets this season, and suspect that I won't burn much more than a half ton, given how infrequently I plan on using it.
I need to do some re-insulating in my attic too, we had it blown in in the late 70's. Well, it's kind of packed down and then we did some ceiling work around and lost some etc. There are some sparse looking areas up there and the stupid drop down stairs. Wow, I remember the year I put those stairs in, the heat cycled longer and more often from then on. I had a well insulated hatch up there but the wife wanted steps so she could get up there. Well guess who goes up there still ? Ya me. Anyway, enough complaining, I need to build a push off cover or what ever to put over that stair stack. last year I put some insulation around it, filling gaps, that at least stopped the cold air draft that was spilling down into the hall. But I know there is still heat transfer going on up there.Actually, last winter I only used 3 tons, not the 3 1/2 I mentioned earlier. Before last winter started, I added OAK and 10" of R30 insulation to my attic.
i was shocked to have used nearly 5 1/2 tons last year. 925 sq. feet single story and 925 sq. foot basement. i send warm air down to the basement and keep it at an average of 50f even in the dead of winter.
first year here we used a few bags over 4 tons.
it was very cold for long stretches last winter. houses all over town had their street to house water lines freezing. the water bureau put a no read meter in our basement and ran a hose from our house to the neighbor's because they simply had to wait to thaw the main supply line. they tried to thaw it, but failed.
but also, heating season stretched 3 days into july. we were just burning once in awhile, but still, a 9 month heating season takes its toll.
i'm just gonna go ahead and assume it gets colder for longer here. (nudge nudge, wink wink)
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