I am not a 24/7 burner. Someday I might consider one of the indoor wood-fired boilers if heating oil continues to cost what it does now, but I am trying to use my little wood stove in the most efficient manner to minimize the amount of oil that I burn this winter. I have set-back thermostats in our house, a 1,750 sq ft Cape. The Century will heat the entire bottom floor and the upstairs zone gets setback in the day time. So if I have a fire going during the day, I don't think the oil boiler will come on at all except for the hot water. But I have not been getting a fire going until the house has been heated back up by the oil boiler starting at 6:00 AM. I'm guessing that I would need to get up early enough to let the wood stove heat the downstairs back up in the morning to reduce my oil consumption the most. It seems like that is when the boiler runs the most so it would make sense that this would be the time to supplement right? Originally I was only going to burn on particularly cold days, but when I see how quiet this stove makes my boiler, I'm starting to think I want to burn more.
Anyone thought all these issues out before?
Thanks.
Anyone thought all these issues out before?
Thanks.