I recently inherited a King Oak wood stove, it was my grandfathers. He restored it when I was a kid, but never used it. Here's a photo of it, I have the chrome parts in a box:
I have a 30x40 detached garage that stores two cars, a lawn mower, and my lawn equipment (chainsaws, leaf blowers, etc). This means I also have some gas cans.
Some people say you cannot have 'solid fuel' stoves in an outbuilding, others say you can't have wood burning stoves in a building that stores vehicles, other say insurance will drop you and your house, and others say it's fine as long as it's installed properly.
The other kicker is, this is also where my woodshop is. I know dust and wood stoves don't get along, but if you keep it clean, I'm not sure what the issue is. It would be EXTREMELY convenient to just shove all my scraps in the wood stove and get free heat.
Thoughts? Am I being stupid here? If I installed it without telling my insurance company, as long as I maintained it, how would they ever know?
Please leave your feedback.... curious to see what people say.
I have a 30x40 detached garage that stores two cars, a lawn mower, and my lawn equipment (chainsaws, leaf blowers, etc). This means I also have some gas cans.
Some people say you cannot have 'solid fuel' stoves in an outbuilding, others say you can't have wood burning stoves in a building that stores vehicles, other say insurance will drop you and your house, and others say it's fine as long as it's installed properly.
The other kicker is, this is also where my woodshop is. I know dust and wood stoves don't get along, but if you keep it clean, I'm not sure what the issue is. It would be EXTREMELY convenient to just shove all my scraps in the wood stove and get free heat.
Thoughts? Am I being stupid here? If I installed it without telling my insurance company, as long as I maintained it, how would they ever know?
Please leave your feedback.... curious to see what people say.
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