Seeking Advice for Newbies First Wood Stove

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.

Bragg Creek

Member
Nov 16, 2022
15
Bragg Creek Alberta
Hello wood heat enthusiasts.

We recently moved to a rural lot that has lots of spruce, pine and poplar trees, many standing dead and recently fallen. Also lots of people giving away pine/spruce from dead fall/tree thinning. I don't plan to burn the poplar. Basically a never ending supply of pine and spruce for burning.

Wood stove will be in basement, 600 sq ft area, with open staircase to main 900 sqft and second floor 900 sqfts. Want to use wood heat to supplement natural gas furnace. Located in the Rocky Mountain foothills west of Calgary, Alberta. It gets really COLD here in winter, -40C a few times per year.

Aiming for budget of $2000 CAD for stove. Burn time of 8+ hours would be great so it can heat overnight.

Any suggestions for brands/models to look for? Is a base level catalytic stove within my budget?

Thanks for reading!
 
2k CAD is a bit of a skinny budget, I haven't been shopping for one this year, and not in the loop for pricing. What models have you been looking at?
I might suggest checking out True North (made in Canada) or Drolet? I was thinking I might buy a True North last year, went Blaze King instead.

I lived in Calgary for almost 4 years, early 2000's (left the day after the Flames didn't win the cup) Bragg Creek was really nice. I'm sure it's changed a ton since then?
 
Hi Woody,
You'd be surprised how little Bragg Creek has changed! There is always talked about development 1-2 years away, that never seems to materialize for one reason or another. It's ok, keeps it's sleepy little village charm.

Someone is selling a never used Century FW3500 for $1200, which fits the budget, just not sure if it's too large for my application.

Is there any downside to having a stove with an oversized firebox larger than I plan to use all the time?
 
Is there any downside to having a stove with an oversized firebox larger than I plan to use all the time?
Can potentially cause headaches--may overheat the place to the point where you start opening windows. And/or you understoke it so much to avoid overheating heating that you might start accumulating creosote. I'd be careful buying an oversized stove. Any sense of how tight your house is? In a leaky old farmhouse, for example, probably not an issue but in a more weathertight building overheating could become a real issue.
 
  • Like
Reactions: GG Woody
Good points. The house is not very tight at all. There are lots of big windows, that are 30 years old and not very efficient. Vaulted ceiling main floor living room and on top floor, lots of room for the heat to go.
 
Never used sounds great!
I'm guessing that the 3500 is a 3.5 cuft firebox? That is a big box for 600 sqft. It really is harder than I would expect to move that much heat upstairs, and I work in HVAC.

We have a 3 cuft box in our 1600 sqft basement, it is nice, but it is definitely a different climate down there!

Glad to hear that Bragg Creek hasn't out grown it's charm. Has Glenmore grown right up next to you. (Guess I could check Google maps)
 
I’ve read on this forum more than once, “You can always build a smaller fire in a large stove.”

Are you starting from scratch? A stove for $1200 could be the cheapest part of the installation. Bonus.

In my case the stove was $4500 and the chimney was $1200 plus labour.
 
Drolet Escape 1200 or 1800 sounds about right. The Century is the low cost version of the biggest Drolet and Osburn, somewhat akin to the Drolet Austral III. It's a serious heater and might be overkill if the heat can not easily convect upstairs.

Are the basment walls fully insulated and has the sill plate been sealed? If not, the heat loss is thru the uninsulated walls will be high.
 
  • Like
Reactions: GG Woody