I am driving myself insane over this...hashing and rehashing...and time is not on my side...we have enjoyed wood heat since 1991 and winter is coming...
Here are my latest thoughts:
The ACT isn't the prettiest stove, but it's really tempting to buy another one...I haven't seen the ACC version, but I employ a KISS principle for things like this, so I'm not particularly excited about it.
I wanted a PE Super, it was too wide at the depth and that wasn't counting the leveling bolts. The Regency I2400 on paper won't fit, but I measured one on a showroom floor...and it looks like it would JUST squeeze in...i'm not ultra comfortable about it though...what if I'm wrong....and that leads me to the next part...
I _LIKED_ running the old quad without fans, after a day at work...quiet with secondaries is nice...it DID provide heat without fans...oh...and if I'm not going to get a freestanding stove, then no fans is another part of KISS for me. The ceiling fan is a better fan than ANY fan in a stove for reliability and quiet. Did I mention I have two golden retrievers...they shed...how often would I be cleaning the fans that are sitting on a hearth with NO height?
So all this would naturally lead me to just buying the leftover 3100i ACT...maybe I could even score a good deal on it...BUT...the cracks.
So, what would you do!?!?, throw caution to the wind and just go with a Quad and then deal with warranty if (when) it cracks? Suck it up and put an Enviro Venice 1200 in (1.85 cu ft EW only box versus 1.9 for Quad...and maybe load it every 30 minutes sooner than we did with the Quad)? Measure again and buy the Regency or Clyde (pushing the budget here) and clean the fans every few weeks? Finding a time machine and going back to 1997 to have the mason build a different firebox/hearth isn't an option.
If/When the Quad cracks...assuming the "real" stainless plate repair, would it be reliable for years to come after the repair?
Details:
36" width at opening, 19 5/8" width at back, 20 1/2" depth to back wall middle, 4" straight back depth before sides angle, 19" depth to back wall measured from top, 15" back wall height before taper, 26 1/4" height at opening, 0" height of hearth extension, 20" depth of hearth, and 26' or so of chimney.
This years wood stacked since last March...bought it semi-seasoned, General moisture meter reads 17-21% on the few fresh splits I made. I did a split on each of the splits before I stacked it...because I wanted to make sure it was going to be ready.
pics...floor plan, goldens love wood fires, thermometer sitting on open part of stairs going upstairs behind couch (cool air from upstairs would be flowing into room, but 21 out and 77 at that spot...3100i...no fans...and it's probably a weeknight, so the quad ran the house up from 66 at 5pm when we got home to loafing along at 77 3 hours later).
HELP!