Hello everyone, first off, this site is awesome and I've spent countless hours since I started this woodburning lifestyle a couple of years ago gleaning information from this site and am glad I can go to a place where my obsession is understood and loved. There, now that that is out of the way on to my post. We've been heating with a Regency H2100 Hearth Heater 24/7 this winter. We have it in the family room on the first floor of our two story home (2500 sq feet). It's working great and have been very impressed with what I've gotten out of this unit. That said, I have an air circulation problem in my home. Our family room will reach a balmy 85 degrees often, while the upstairs hovers around 68. We have an open stairway on the opposite side from where the woodstove is installed (the stairs run paralell with the woodstove door). I've spent alot of time researching how to improve air circulation on this site and it seems the consensus is to move cold air to the stove. I am looking for some advice/thoughts on the following plan to move the cold air from upstairs to the stove in an effort to even out the temps.
1. Install insulated duct with a duct fan that will run from the bottom of the hallway wall upstairs to the bottom of the wall across from the woodstove. The idea would be to blow the cold air upstairs down to the family room which I'm hoping would not only cool our family room sauna, but push some of that heat upstairs. Would it be better if I terminated the duct directly infront of the woodstove instead? (blowing the upstairs cold air directly infront of the stove?) I thought about doing this, but figured it would cool the woodstove too much and possibly cause drafting issues.
2. Install a small ceiling fan at the top of the stairway and set it to reverse to help pull warm air upstairs.
I'm also open to completely scrapping this plan and trying other methods. I have tried using the fan approach (small fans on the floor pointed towards the stove), but haven't gotten much results from it.
James
1. Install insulated duct with a duct fan that will run from the bottom of the hallway wall upstairs to the bottom of the wall across from the woodstove. The idea would be to blow the cold air upstairs down to the family room which I'm hoping would not only cool our family room sauna, but push some of that heat upstairs. Would it be better if I terminated the duct directly infront of the woodstove instead? (blowing the upstairs cold air directly infront of the stove?) I thought about doing this, but figured it would cool the woodstove too much and possibly cause drafting issues.
2. Install a small ceiling fan at the top of the stairway and set it to reverse to help pull warm air upstairs.
I'm also open to completely scrapping this plan and trying other methods. I have tried using the fan approach (small fans on the floor pointed towards the stove), but haven't gotten much results from it.
James