Hi,
Had a question about used wood stoves. First experience with one was when I was (recently) overseas, and I fell in love with wood stoves ever since. Had a nice German one where I was staying, and now with the price of oil the way it is, want to get one here now that I am just recently back stateside. The thing was pretty basic, and worked well..forget the company name though.
In a rush to buy something for this season and did some looking around. Saw a bunch of Vermont Castings used in my area, an "Alaskan" stove, and a couple "Dovre"s. Also saw a Century stove, which is made by cfm. What I want is a fairly simple bulletproof stove that wont require too much cash on hand to maintain or fix, and doesn't have too many expensive fragile parts, and that will provide effective safe heat for a one story 1300 sq foot house, with a 6 inch flue in the chimney.
Any suggestions would be appreciated. In a bit of a pickle and wanting to get a stove asap.
Had a question about used wood stoves. First experience with one was when I was (recently) overseas, and I fell in love with wood stoves ever since. Had a nice German one where I was staying, and now with the price of oil the way it is, want to get one here now that I am just recently back stateside. The thing was pretty basic, and worked well..forget the company name though.
In a rush to buy something for this season and did some looking around. Saw a bunch of Vermont Castings used in my area, an "Alaskan" stove, and a couple "Dovre"s. Also saw a Century stove, which is made by cfm. What I want is a fairly simple bulletproof stove that wont require too much cash on hand to maintain or fix, and doesn't have too many expensive fragile parts, and that will provide effective safe heat for a one story 1300 sq foot house, with a 6 inch flue in the chimney.
Any suggestions would be appreciated. In a bit of a pickle and wanting to get a stove asap.
That woman was being exceptionally honest, that's refreshing. For your cheapest options, I would check out the Century (depending on size...nice to be able to get an overnight burn if you want.) Or the Englander 30. Like Bart said, you have to know weather it will vent through your chimney setup. You will have to look at any used stove carefully and try to determine if it's been over-fired. Have the owner describe how he started the stove, and see if it sounds like he knew what he was doing (monitoring stove temp, cutting air as the stove gets up to temp.) Ask if he had a stove top thermometer. Of course if he burned wet wood, most of this won't apply, but he may have over-fired trying to get the wood to burn.
Check for warped steel, broken welds, cracked bricks etc. You may have to move the baffle boards to look at the top welds. Be careful; The boards are delicate, and easily damaged. Shine a light inside toward the seams and look outside for light leakage. Google how to buy a used wood stove.