I'm hoping someone has some experience in picking an adequate wood stove for a hoop house (30x36', 6 mil poly film, single wall, 13-14' high in the center). Its in USDA zone 8B of Texas and we don't have too many nights below freezing, but it does stay 16-24*F for three consecutive says out of the year at some point and there are plenty of cold nights between November 15 and March 15. I'm growing Cactus and succulents inside it and I want to keep it a minimum of 45-55*F inside all winter. It will also contain vegetables near spring. The stove will be on a treated 2X6 floor, probably with a piece of concrete board and patio stones for a hearth.
Wood supply isn't an issue, I already burn it in brush piles to remove it, I'm constantly clearing brush. Most of what I'll be burning is cedar and bird berry (thicker trunk pieces), mixed with southern live oak as it becomes available. I'm aware of the creosote buildup from cedar and that it burns faster and hotter than other woods, so hopefully I can get a stove that handles it, or work around it with a smaller fire, heat loading the greenhouse during the day, etc.
The list:
Right now I'm looking at the Drolet HT2000 (probably out of my price range), Drolet Austral II, and the china harbor (northern tool) Model 2016EB. I prefer to avoid anything from China, it rarely lasts, but people seem satisfied with the Northern Tool 100,000BTU unit. The Vogelzang ponderosa also peeked my interest for its price and box capacity, but its from China. I would love to opt for the Model 2016EB for its price but the question is... will it hold up for at least 5-10 years? I'm picking up locally from either Costco or northern tool, and its tax exempt so I don't have to worry about that. I also looked at the Englander 30, but the thinner 1/4th inch metal has me shying away since if it got sprayed with water, it might warp.
Cost is an issue, $1,000 is my budget, $1200 if its super good. Efficiency isn't a priority, just durability and cost, I can always get more wood.
I'm estimating I'll need a bare minimum of 40,000 BTUs but don't want to refill the firebox every 4 hours, so a bigger 75,000 BTU+ unit is desirable. I don't want used, or cast iron. Cast iron, as nice as it is for storing heat, its too inefficient and will burn through wood like its candy.
Please no rocket stoves, barrel stoves, or hot water heaters!
Any information on the federal rebate program is great too. I stumbled over https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/epa-updated-list-of-595-certified-stoves-for-2020.176138/ , but that list is tiny. Whats the incentive for people to get an EPA stove if only a handful qualify? Seems like a silly program.
Much love
Wood supply isn't an issue, I already burn it in brush piles to remove it, I'm constantly clearing brush. Most of what I'll be burning is cedar and bird berry (thicker trunk pieces), mixed with southern live oak as it becomes available. I'm aware of the creosote buildup from cedar and that it burns faster and hotter than other woods, so hopefully I can get a stove that handles it, or work around it with a smaller fire, heat loading the greenhouse during the day, etc.
The list:
Right now I'm looking at the Drolet HT2000 (probably out of my price range), Drolet Austral II, and the china harbor (northern tool) Model 2016EB. I prefer to avoid anything from China, it rarely lasts, but people seem satisfied with the Northern Tool 100,000BTU unit. The Vogelzang ponderosa also peeked my interest for its price and box capacity, but its from China. I would love to opt for the Model 2016EB for its price but the question is... will it hold up for at least 5-10 years? I'm picking up locally from either Costco or northern tool, and its tax exempt so I don't have to worry about that. I also looked at the Englander 30, but the thinner 1/4th inch metal has me shying away since if it got sprayed with water, it might warp.
Cost is an issue, $1,000 is my budget, $1200 if its super good. Efficiency isn't a priority, just durability and cost, I can always get more wood.
I'm estimating I'll need a bare minimum of 40,000 BTUs but don't want to refill the firebox every 4 hours, so a bigger 75,000 BTU+ unit is desirable. I don't want used, or cast iron. Cast iron, as nice as it is for storing heat, its too inefficient and will burn through wood like its candy.
Please no rocket stoves, barrel stoves, or hot water heaters!
Any information on the federal rebate program is great too. I stumbled over https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/epa-updated-list-of-595-certified-stoves-for-2020.176138/ , but that list is tiny. Whats the incentive for people to get an EPA stove if only a handful qualify? Seems like a silly program.
Much love