- Sep 30, 2012
- 2
Hello All,
new to the forum... I was refered by another member. I may or may not have screwed up my stove and am looking for advice. Stove is a 5 year old Quadrafire 5700 step top pedestal with no ash pan and the auxilary blowers. It has burned approximately 10 cords of mixed hardwoods..... well the firebrick started showing its age and was cracked/deteriorating and basically falling apart. I called Quadrafire and they wanted over $300 for a new set of firebrick.... being nieve I said forget that and came up with a better plan.
I left the original firebrick in the stove and bent up some 3/8ths plate steel into "L's"--I put one to the left and one to the right and then bent one for front to back and set it on top of the other two--I didn't weld or make an other modifications. I am now being told that this is going to hold too much heat and wreck the stove on one hand, then I have other people saying it will work great and don't look back.
Basically I want somebody that has the facts to tell me if i am an idiot or not and whether I should pull the pieces out and cut my own firebrick or leave it the way it is. Quadrafire has been having trouble with these fireboxes cracking and they aren't doing much to help the customers--I almost wish I didn't spend the $2300 for it. I THOUGHT I would be helping it with the heavy plate being OVER the original firebrick--but what they are saying is that the infared radiation will just bounce off the steel and will make the stove go super-nova.
Any and all info will be most appreciated... I like the idea of burning wood and it has saved me oil but I don't want to make a bad mistake and burn my house down.
Thanks a ton!
Tony Ruggiero
Andover CT
new to the forum... I was refered by another member. I may or may not have screwed up my stove and am looking for advice. Stove is a 5 year old Quadrafire 5700 step top pedestal with no ash pan and the auxilary blowers. It has burned approximately 10 cords of mixed hardwoods..... well the firebrick started showing its age and was cracked/deteriorating and basically falling apart. I called Quadrafire and they wanted over $300 for a new set of firebrick.... being nieve I said forget that and came up with a better plan.
I left the original firebrick in the stove and bent up some 3/8ths plate steel into "L's"--I put one to the left and one to the right and then bent one for front to back and set it on top of the other two--I didn't weld or make an other modifications. I am now being told that this is going to hold too much heat and wreck the stove on one hand, then I have other people saying it will work great and don't look back.
Basically I want somebody that has the facts to tell me if i am an idiot or not and whether I should pull the pieces out and cut my own firebrick or leave it the way it is. Quadrafire has been having trouble with these fireboxes cracking and they aren't doing much to help the customers--I almost wish I didn't spend the $2300 for it. I THOUGHT I would be helping it with the heavy plate being OVER the original firebrick--but what they are saying is that the infared radiation will just bounce off the steel and will make the stove go super-nova.
Any and all info will be most appreciated... I like the idea of burning wood and it has saved me oil but I don't want to make a bad mistake and burn my house down.
Thanks a ton!
Tony Ruggiero
Andover CT