hey all,
New to the site and writing from Israel.
Will be heating a roughly 1,600 square foot space solely with wood -- and was considering a few ovens -- am leaning towards the Pacific Energy Super 27 which is now available here ...
My question is wood: There is little hardwood available in Israel, the forest right around the house is all pine and cedar -- and I can get eucalyptus and some harder citrus woods, but that is the extent of it. I currently have about 2 cubic meters of eucalyptus on have that has been drying for about 1.5 years -- and expect to need about another 1.5 to 2 cubes for the winter ... I can cut and dry softwood for next season, but there is not a real wood-burning culture here, so if I go ahead and order some more eucalyptus for this year, even if its supposedly 'dry' - have no real guarantees on what that means ...
..I've heard that the new stoves need really dry wood to operate properly ... will burning wood that is not altogether dry really affect stove output to the degree that I should consider a more traditional stove?
The only traditional cast iron stove in the Super 27's price range is the Royal Godin 1 - and I've heard mixed things and it only puts out 15kw max as opposed to the PE's 21 kw ... once you get into DRU, Nestor Martin, Vermont Castings, Jotul, etc...the price for a stove that size jumps by $600 or more...
The budget jump is unrealistic for us, and it also seems like the Super 27 is a great stove. I will be running about 4 meters of flue - so around 12 feet -- which should be enough -- so again, wood is really the question...
Thanks - and sorry for such a wordy post.
Avi
New to the site and writing from Israel.
Will be heating a roughly 1,600 square foot space solely with wood -- and was considering a few ovens -- am leaning towards the Pacific Energy Super 27 which is now available here ...
My question is wood: There is little hardwood available in Israel, the forest right around the house is all pine and cedar -- and I can get eucalyptus and some harder citrus woods, but that is the extent of it. I currently have about 2 cubic meters of eucalyptus on have that has been drying for about 1.5 years -- and expect to need about another 1.5 to 2 cubes for the winter ... I can cut and dry softwood for next season, but there is not a real wood-burning culture here, so if I go ahead and order some more eucalyptus for this year, even if its supposedly 'dry' - have no real guarantees on what that means ...
..I've heard that the new stoves need really dry wood to operate properly ... will burning wood that is not altogether dry really affect stove output to the degree that I should consider a more traditional stove?
The only traditional cast iron stove in the Super 27's price range is the Royal Godin 1 - and I've heard mixed things and it only puts out 15kw max as opposed to the PE's 21 kw ... once you get into DRU, Nestor Martin, Vermont Castings, Jotul, etc...the price for a stove that size jumps by $600 or more...
The budget jump is unrealistic for us, and it also seems like the Super 27 is a great stove. I will be running about 4 meters of flue - so around 12 feet -- which should be enough -- so again, wood is really the question...
Thanks - and sorry for such a wordy post.
Avi