Hello,
This is my first post here and I hope I've done enough research so that it does not bore/upset the fine perusers of this forum.
I moved into my Michigan house 3 years ago. It was at one time set up for a wood stove with about 15' of stainless, 6", insulated flue of the type 2 shown on this link (https://www.hearth.com/econtent/index.php/articles/installing_a_woodstove). It now has a propane stove, which the previous owner installed, in place of the once wood burner but the wood version is long gone. The top of the flue has about a 3' additional section of 4" galvanized, uninsulated flue.
My plan is to switch the stove back to wood as last year I had almost $2k worth of winter propane (main furnace, water heater) use. The percentage of wood use will vary with my presence as I can travel frequently during the winter and my wife won't deal with the work/mess involved. I'm not in a hurry with propane coming back down (currently $1.70 vs $2.40 last time) but, I'm sure it won't stay that way forever. Also, I have about 3.5 wooded acres with some standing dead ash and about 3-5 shag bark hickory trees falling each year. My back door neighbor has more acreage with more fee wood for the taking and there is always plenty of free wood/trees in my area so fuel is not a problem.
Now for some questions.
Was the reduction at the top of the flue necessary for the propane stove installation? Is it possible that it was needed with a wood burner if he had a super-efficient type?
Although I have plenty of wood available, I'd rather burn efficient. What is the difference between EPA certified and UL #1482?
Why are some stoves sold as "EPA Exempt" and what is their typical efficiency?
I've been looking locally for pre-owned stoves since there's a lot of wood usage here and there's lots of stuff available. However, typically the owners don't know, care or can be bothered to give out manufacturer plate information. Can someone here let me know what vintage stove this ((broken link removed)) would be and any opinions on it?
Hopefully that's not too many questions for one post.
Thanks.
Ramon
This is my first post here and I hope I've done enough research so that it does not bore/upset the fine perusers of this forum.
I moved into my Michigan house 3 years ago. It was at one time set up for a wood stove with about 15' of stainless, 6", insulated flue of the type 2 shown on this link (https://www.hearth.com/econtent/index.php/articles/installing_a_woodstove). It now has a propane stove, which the previous owner installed, in place of the once wood burner but the wood version is long gone. The top of the flue has about a 3' additional section of 4" galvanized, uninsulated flue.
My plan is to switch the stove back to wood as last year I had almost $2k worth of winter propane (main furnace, water heater) use. The percentage of wood use will vary with my presence as I can travel frequently during the winter and my wife won't deal with the work/mess involved. I'm not in a hurry with propane coming back down (currently $1.70 vs $2.40 last time) but, I'm sure it won't stay that way forever. Also, I have about 3.5 wooded acres with some standing dead ash and about 3-5 shag bark hickory trees falling each year. My back door neighbor has more acreage with more fee wood for the taking and there is always plenty of free wood/trees in my area so fuel is not a problem.
Now for some questions.
Was the reduction at the top of the flue necessary for the propane stove installation? Is it possible that it was needed with a wood burner if he had a super-efficient type?
Although I have plenty of wood available, I'd rather burn efficient. What is the difference between EPA certified and UL #1482?
Why are some stoves sold as "EPA Exempt" and what is their typical efficiency?
I've been looking locally for pre-owned stoves since there's a lot of wood usage here and there's lots of stuff available. However, typically the owners don't know, care or can be bothered to give out manufacturer plate information. Can someone here let me know what vintage stove this ((broken link removed)) would be and any opinions on it?
Hopefully that's not too many questions for one post.
Thanks.
Ramon