I have read a lot about Blaze King. Everything I can find on the internet. It is just so hard to know what size stove to get without learning from experience by trial and error. I am asking people who have had a Blaze King what they think I should get based on my priorities.
I am very much attracted to the 40 hour burn time of the King. We have a 1 1/2 story house out in the country, 1/4 mile from a cliff overlooking Lake Michigan. We do get the blowing and drifting snow that comes off the lake, but there are quite a few trees breaking the wind between the lake and our house. But more wind then if we didn't live near the lake-shore. The bottom story is 991 ft with a 3/4 story upstairs. It would be a full 2 story home except the 2nd story walls are not 8 ft high on the perimeter of the house. So about 742 ft upstairs. There is no insulation in the house at all, and it was built in the 1890's. I may be putting insulation in the attic at some point. The windows are probably original. We would put the stove in the living room pretty much in the corner that is near the center of the house. There is a normal size doorway leading from the living room into the kitchen and a large door leading from the living room into the bedroom. From there a door from the kitchen and a door from the bedroom lead into the bathroom completing the circle. The door to the upstairs will be right next to the wood stove. There will be numerous open vents leading down to the unfinished basement. The wood stove will be the main heat source. Any back-up heat source will hopefully never be used.
From mid-December though early-March we can count on normal high temps being anywhere from 5 or 10 degrees to 35 degrees. A couple days each winter it may even get down to -20 and a low of 0 is not uncommon. Fahrenheit of course. In October the highs may be in the 50's and November and March can be quite cold. The first snow flakes show up around Halloween.
So, my question is if the King size is doable without roasting us out of the home. I would love to run it on low all the time and take advantage of the large box and long burn times. I will be burning all types of wood (some that has been dead and partially rotted and some that is solid) - oak, maple, cherry, beech, walnut, white pine, red pine, hemlock etc. Please help. If you have any questions please ask. Thanks.
P.S. I'm including a screenshot of average temps from usclimatedata.com but these numbers do seem high to me but are probably accurate.
I am very much attracted to the 40 hour burn time of the King. We have a 1 1/2 story house out in the country, 1/4 mile from a cliff overlooking Lake Michigan. We do get the blowing and drifting snow that comes off the lake, but there are quite a few trees breaking the wind between the lake and our house. But more wind then if we didn't live near the lake-shore. The bottom story is 991 ft with a 3/4 story upstairs. It would be a full 2 story home except the 2nd story walls are not 8 ft high on the perimeter of the house. So about 742 ft upstairs. There is no insulation in the house at all, and it was built in the 1890's. I may be putting insulation in the attic at some point. The windows are probably original. We would put the stove in the living room pretty much in the corner that is near the center of the house. There is a normal size doorway leading from the living room into the kitchen and a large door leading from the living room into the bedroom. From there a door from the kitchen and a door from the bedroom lead into the bathroom completing the circle. The door to the upstairs will be right next to the wood stove. There will be numerous open vents leading down to the unfinished basement. The wood stove will be the main heat source. Any back-up heat source will hopefully never be used.
From mid-December though early-March we can count on normal high temps being anywhere from 5 or 10 degrees to 35 degrees. A couple days each winter it may even get down to -20 and a low of 0 is not uncommon. Fahrenheit of course. In October the highs may be in the 50's and November and March can be quite cold. The first snow flakes show up around Halloween.
So, my question is if the King size is doable without roasting us out of the home. I would love to run it on low all the time and take advantage of the large box and long burn times. I will be burning all types of wood (some that has been dead and partially rotted and some that is solid) - oak, maple, cherry, beech, walnut, white pine, red pine, hemlock etc. Please help. If you have any questions please ask. Thanks.
P.S. I'm including a screenshot of average temps from usclimatedata.com but these numbers do seem high to me but are probably accurate.
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