Hello all. I’m Dave from central NY. It’s an honor to be here. Have came across the open forum topics many times when searching online for wood stove questions. But have used FB groups mostly for asking questions. I have a model that I’m not able to find much help with on fb, so here I am. But first allow me to give a history of me and wood burning so you know more about where I’m coming from
We live on 100 acres in the country in a small town in central NY. We moved on this property 12 years ago when my parents who own it invited us over to live after our daughter was born. She has special needs and we needed a place out of town to raise her and her brother. They had an old single wide mobile home they had rented to local collage kids and allowed us to move in it while we saved for our own home and land. I added a 12x30 Amish style shed as an addition to the mobile home essentially making my hike look like the letter T from a Birds Eye view. My step dad heated with wood and I quickly took after him when seeing how cheap and rewarding it is. Started with a food furnace that we put just outside the mobile home in a steel shed with duct pipe running into the trailer. Since there was no room for a wood furnace inside. Very old mobile home and is hard to keep warm when we get temps under 15 degrees. 5 years in I grew tired of having to get dressed at night to walk outside and load it. And when we lost power..no heat. Again…this was simply a wood furnace. Not a boiler. So I purchased an old Atlantic Huntsman stove to put in the addition and I made a barrel stove for the larger section of the home. We homestead, live in an old home that’s had many alterations done and don’t have insurance so we kind of do what we want. And I’ll be honest, that barrel stove delivers heat! I have it on two inches of brick under it and on the wall beside it. I love it. For a stove that size by a stove company I’d have to get a blaze king 40 and that’s $4,000. The Hunstamn stove is a two door with a draft knob on each door. I am happy with these two stoves and know them well. I love the door draft knobs on the Huntsman.
This year I’ve decided I’d like a bigger stove than the hunstman and also the doors have warped a little leaving a gap allowing air in. The barrel stove is great but…it’s a barrel and I’d like an actual stove. I found two stoves to replace them. One old big solid Bullard (looks like a big Timberline) that cost me $200 and a Fisher Goldilocks that cost me $250. DEAL!!
Now for my questions.
1 Just learned today after buying it that the fisher has the holes under the plate at the bottom of the pedestal for cold air intake. My home is old and I have plenty of cold air coming in everywhere. I’m tempted to just lay the fisher goldy flat on a hearth and use the draft door knobs for all my air intake needs. the included round ball legs are missing anyway. I’m assuming this will be no issue. But wanted to see if anyone has ever used the fisher Goldilocks in the same way? Bypassing the option for the cold air intake at the bottom and using it like a regular stove? I can’t foresee bypassing allowing cold air up the bottom to hinder burns but want to double check.
2. The baffle in the fisher is bent pretty well. There is a 2 inch difference between each side and it’s bent up a bit too. But I don’t think this will hinder draft that bad. If I do need to swap it for a straight baffle, I noticed it’s been welded in. So I’d have to remove the baffle and the two L brackets it’s attached to. So I’d have to hire a welder to make a whole new one. Any of you guys use a bent up baffle with success? Does it NEED to be dead flat to do its job?
Looking forward to hearing from you and thanks again!!
Dave
We live on 100 acres in the country in a small town in central NY. We moved on this property 12 years ago when my parents who own it invited us over to live after our daughter was born. She has special needs and we needed a place out of town to raise her and her brother. They had an old single wide mobile home they had rented to local collage kids and allowed us to move in it while we saved for our own home and land. I added a 12x30 Amish style shed as an addition to the mobile home essentially making my hike look like the letter T from a Birds Eye view. My step dad heated with wood and I quickly took after him when seeing how cheap and rewarding it is. Started with a food furnace that we put just outside the mobile home in a steel shed with duct pipe running into the trailer. Since there was no room for a wood furnace inside. Very old mobile home and is hard to keep warm when we get temps under 15 degrees. 5 years in I grew tired of having to get dressed at night to walk outside and load it. And when we lost power..no heat. Again…this was simply a wood furnace. Not a boiler. So I purchased an old Atlantic Huntsman stove to put in the addition and I made a barrel stove for the larger section of the home. We homestead, live in an old home that’s had many alterations done and don’t have insurance so we kind of do what we want. And I’ll be honest, that barrel stove delivers heat! I have it on two inches of brick under it and on the wall beside it. I love it. For a stove that size by a stove company I’d have to get a blaze king 40 and that’s $4,000. The Hunstamn stove is a two door with a draft knob on each door. I am happy with these two stoves and know them well. I love the door draft knobs on the Huntsman.
This year I’ve decided I’d like a bigger stove than the hunstman and also the doors have warped a little leaving a gap allowing air in. The barrel stove is great but…it’s a barrel and I’d like an actual stove. I found two stoves to replace them. One old big solid Bullard (looks like a big Timberline) that cost me $200 and a Fisher Goldilocks that cost me $250. DEAL!!
Now for my questions.
1 Just learned today after buying it that the fisher has the holes under the plate at the bottom of the pedestal for cold air intake. My home is old and I have plenty of cold air coming in everywhere. I’m tempted to just lay the fisher goldy flat on a hearth and use the draft door knobs for all my air intake needs. the included round ball legs are missing anyway. I’m assuming this will be no issue. But wanted to see if anyone has ever used the fisher Goldilocks in the same way? Bypassing the option for the cold air intake at the bottom and using it like a regular stove? I can’t foresee bypassing allowing cold air up the bottom to hinder burns but want to double check.
2. The baffle in the fisher is bent pretty well. There is a 2 inch difference between each side and it’s bent up a bit too. But I don’t think this will hinder draft that bad. If I do need to swap it for a straight baffle, I noticed it’s been welded in. So I’d have to remove the baffle and the two L brackets it’s attached to. So I’d have to hire a welder to make a whole new one. Any of you guys use a bent up baffle with success? Does it NEED to be dead flat to do its job?
Looking forward to hearing from you and thanks again!!
Dave