Good afternoon, everyone! I am a first-time poster and total beginner when it comes to wood stoves and cold winters. We live in an 1859 saltbox-style house in Connecticut (USA), with around 2,100 sq. ft. of heated space. The current setup uses baseboard steam with heating oil, split into three thermostat zones: basement, first floor, and second floor. In our first winter (2024-25), we kept the thermostat at 64°F for the day/floor 1 and night/floor 2, and 58°F otherwise (basement, night/floor 1, day/floor 2). Our 28-year-old boiler (still running at ~90% AFUE) consumed heating oil like there was no tomorrow. After a cold and expensive winter, we are hoping to make the next winter both warmer and more affordable, at the cost of some capital expense during the summer.
We had an energy audit done in April, and the main recommendations were wall and floor insulation. Both are very pricey. That led us to explore supplementary heating, which brought me here! We have two brick masonry fireplaces - one in the basement and one in the living room - both sharing a single chimney. We presume that they are from the original construction in 1859. We tried burning wood in those fireplaces during the winter, but they were terribly inefficient for heat retention. So we are now considering installing a wood stove insert in the living room fireplace to make the first floor area more comfortable, see attached floor plan.
A few questions, in no particular order:
Appreciate any advice or experiences you can share. Thanks in advance!
We had an energy audit done in April, and the main recommendations were wall and floor insulation. Both are very pricey. That led us to explore supplementary heating, which brought me here! We have two brick masonry fireplaces - one in the basement and one in the living room - both sharing a single chimney. We presume that they are from the original construction in 1859. We tried burning wood in those fireplaces during the winter, but they were terribly inefficient for heat retention. So we are now considering installing a wood stove insert in the living room fireplace to make the first floor area more comfortable, see attached floor plan.
A few questions, in no particular order:
- Based on the floor plan (attached), would an insert in the living room fireplace (see red arrow) help heat the dining area as well? What about the office? Or, should we be considering a stove in a different location?
- We were budgeting for about $4k -- is that in the correct ballpark?
- Would this setup actually improve comfort and reduce our monthly expense during winter (heating oil + wood) or should we wait another couple of years to be able to afford wall and floor insulation?
- Is there a cheaper way to make the fireplace more efficient?
Appreciate any advice or experiences you can share. Thanks in advance!
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