I know this question has been asked many times before so I appreciate your patience but I'd love to here your feedback.
7 yrs ago I was thinking of installing a pellet fireplace insert but held off because the location and layout of my house was not conducive to a good flow but I plan to redo the the house to open things up a bit. Now an insert will work perfectly but the question is should I still go with pellet or maybe wood or coal? I like the pellet because of the less storage required vs wood but how have prices been? Oil by me is sub $2.49 per gal (it will go back up) and wood cost particularly nothing around me if I'm will to do the work of cutting/splitting/stacking. As for coal my wife is against it because she grew up with a coal stove and she always felt it caused more dust then what its worth. Plus I really don't see an abundant amount coal buying options in my area. Living on the south shore of Long Island with a single floor 1500 sq ft house if pellets I would expect to use 3-4 tons, 6-7 cords wood or 3-4? tons of coal.
7 yrs ago I was thinking of installing a pellet fireplace insert but held off because the location and layout of my house was not conducive to a good flow but I plan to redo the the house to open things up a bit. Now an insert will work perfectly but the question is should I still go with pellet or maybe wood or coal? I like the pellet because of the less storage required vs wood but how have prices been? Oil by me is sub $2.49 per gal (it will go back up) and wood cost particularly nothing around me if I'm will to do the work of cutting/splitting/stacking. As for coal my wife is against it because she grew up with a coal stove and she always felt it caused more dust then what its worth. Plus I really don't see an abundant amount coal buying options in my area. Living on the south shore of Long Island with a single floor 1500 sq ft house if pellets I would expect to use 3-4 tons, 6-7 cords wood or 3-4? tons of coal.
In most places, coal ash can go out with the trash. As for pretty stokers, Keystoker, Reading Stove, and Leisureline all make very pretty stoves. Also, all the stokers put out AT LEAST 90,000 btu's of STEADY heat. Your wife's experiences with coal are no longer relevant.
Even ash disposal is less dusty than it used to be. Many stoves include two ash pans or you just buy an extra. Pull it out, spray it down with water, cover it, and put the new one in. Take the full one outside or the garage and dump it in a covered container. Also, remove the ash pan BEFORE shaking down so hot coals aren't in there creating rising hot air to carry dust with it. It's all in the handling.