I am planning to install a pellet stove. I have next to zero experience with them and I'm hoping for a general introduction and suggestions on how to choose and place the stove.
Information about the house:
+Location: Central Massachusetts
+Style: Cape, 2 floors
+Age: Built 1963
+Floor plan: See attached figure (not to scale, but in the ballpark)
+Size: 2,369 sq ft (including addition – MBR in the floor plan)
+Ceiling height: 7' 2â€
+Current heat: 1) Radiant electric ceiling heat in all rooms except the office 2) Daikin inverters (similar to (broken link removed to http://www.daikin.com/global_ac/products/residential/multi_nx/outline.html)) in the FR, DR, LR, MBR, office, BR1, and BR2.
+Ductwork: None
+Insulation: Fair (we're having a heating audit done in Oct. and we'll try to tighten it up.)
Our goal is to get as much heat for the first and second floors (not basement or grayed areas in the floor plan) as we can from pellets.
The radiant heat is expensive. Our monthly electric bill for Jan is approximately $450 (~110 kWh/day). We only heat the rooms we're in and keep the temperature low. In June it is approximately $100 (~25 kWh/day). The Daikin system will work well for all but the coldest days (< 5 deg F), so I only want to use it to even out the temperature, but I don't want to rely on it.
There is a Harman dealer nearby and we were planning on going with a Harman pellet stove.
We are planning on redoing our kitchen and surrounds and the more open floor plan shown in the figure reflects those changes, but we can make some alterations if they will be helpful. The two stove placements we were considering are marked in red. The one in the family room (FR) would be freestanding and (maybe?) can be angled towards the dining room (DR). The one in the living room (LR) would be a fireplace insert. We're open to other suggestions.
The Daikin systems have a fan mode, so they can be used to move air. We have a ceiling fan in the master bedroom (black X). We are considering putting ceiling fans in the family room and living room (gray X's).
In the remodel, there is a fair chance that the family room will get a cathedral ceiling (thus the ceiling fan). The current attic space above the family room (which would be turned into the cathedral ceiling) has a small door that opens into the office (marked with blue rectangles). (See question 4 below.)
Specific questions:
1) How well can we realistically hope to heat this house with a stove?
2) We want to do this right. Would 2 smaller stoves be more feasible, one in each location?
3) If one stove, what output would be appropriate? If two stoves, what output?
4) It is too crazy to put a duct or even small fan where the blue rectangle is, thus moving air from the family room directly to the second floor office? That would at least help heat the office. (I don't know how this would fly with the local code.)
5) We could also install a fan where the green rectangle is moving air towards the master bedroom. Would that be potentially useful?
6) What are good options for stove placement?
(Sorry for the long post. I figued more information was better.)
Thank you so much in advance.
Information about the house:
+Location: Central Massachusetts
+Style: Cape, 2 floors
+Age: Built 1963
+Floor plan: See attached figure (not to scale, but in the ballpark)
+Size: 2,369 sq ft (including addition – MBR in the floor plan)
+Ceiling height: 7' 2â€
+Current heat: 1) Radiant electric ceiling heat in all rooms except the office 2) Daikin inverters (similar to (broken link removed to http://www.daikin.com/global_ac/products/residential/multi_nx/outline.html)) in the FR, DR, LR, MBR, office, BR1, and BR2.
+Ductwork: None
+Insulation: Fair (we're having a heating audit done in Oct. and we'll try to tighten it up.)
Our goal is to get as much heat for the first and second floors (not basement or grayed areas in the floor plan) as we can from pellets.
The radiant heat is expensive. Our monthly electric bill for Jan is approximately $450 (~110 kWh/day). We only heat the rooms we're in and keep the temperature low. In June it is approximately $100 (~25 kWh/day). The Daikin system will work well for all but the coldest days (< 5 deg F), so I only want to use it to even out the temperature, but I don't want to rely on it.
There is a Harman dealer nearby and we were planning on going with a Harman pellet stove.
We are planning on redoing our kitchen and surrounds and the more open floor plan shown in the figure reflects those changes, but we can make some alterations if they will be helpful. The two stove placements we were considering are marked in red. The one in the family room (FR) would be freestanding and (maybe?) can be angled towards the dining room (DR). The one in the living room (LR) would be a fireplace insert. We're open to other suggestions.
The Daikin systems have a fan mode, so they can be used to move air. We have a ceiling fan in the master bedroom (black X). We are considering putting ceiling fans in the family room and living room (gray X's).
In the remodel, there is a fair chance that the family room will get a cathedral ceiling (thus the ceiling fan). The current attic space above the family room (which would be turned into the cathedral ceiling) has a small door that opens into the office (marked with blue rectangles). (See question 4 below.)
Specific questions:
1) How well can we realistically hope to heat this house with a stove?
2) We want to do this right. Would 2 smaller stoves be more feasible, one in each location?
3) If one stove, what output would be appropriate? If two stoves, what output?
4) It is too crazy to put a duct or even small fan where the blue rectangle is, thus moving air from the family room directly to the second floor office? That would at least help heat the office. (I don't know how this would fly with the local code.)
5) We could also install a fan where the green rectangle is moving air towards the master bedroom. Would that be potentially useful?
6) What are good options for stove placement?
(Sorry for the long post. I figued more information was better.)
Thank you so much in advance.