I’m looking for advice on purchasing a new wood stove for our off-the-grid camp in Vermont’s Northeast Kingdom.
The camp is 24x16.
It has an open design with a sleeping loft for the second floor. We have a 48 inch DC ceiling fan over the main room.
The camp has light insulation throughout and I don’t plan on adding more. On the outer walls, there is 1/2 inch insulating sheathed under the 1 inch rough cut pine. On the first floor, I’ve insulated only the lower 4 feet with 2 inch sheathing under the 1 inch rough cut interior wall covering. The roof is uninsulated.
At the moment, we’re burning 1.5 year seasoned maple and poplar in our 50 year old Trolla 105. We harvested this wood from the property but in the future I won’t be using poplar at all. We’ll be burning cordwood from the local wood supplier which I think will include a lot of birch.
We usually use the camp for 4-7 days at a time, 3 to 5 times per year, mostly in cold weather.
My question has to do with stove size: How big a stove for this space?
My primary concern is to be able to warm the place with ease on long January nights where temps can - though rarely - drop to -20F, but generally are around 0-10F overnight and 10-20F during the day. So, I’m looking for 8+ hour burn times.
My secondary concern is to not get blown out in the shoulder seasons where overnights are 10-20F warmer.
To keep this specific, at the moment, I am considering Woodstock’s Absolute Steel (2.45 liter firebox) and the Ideal Steel (3.2 liter firebox). I like these and other catalytic stoves because, from what I’ve read here, they can burn at low, steady temps for long periods. Woodstock is also a local, Connecticut River Valley company.
Would the Absolute be adequate on long January overnights? Would the Ideal blow us out in the shoulder seasons?
Thanks in advance for your thoughts.
The camp is 24x16.
It has an open design with a sleeping loft for the second floor. We have a 48 inch DC ceiling fan over the main room.
The camp has light insulation throughout and I don’t plan on adding more. On the outer walls, there is 1/2 inch insulating sheathed under the 1 inch rough cut pine. On the first floor, I’ve insulated only the lower 4 feet with 2 inch sheathing under the 1 inch rough cut interior wall covering. The roof is uninsulated.
At the moment, we’re burning 1.5 year seasoned maple and poplar in our 50 year old Trolla 105. We harvested this wood from the property but in the future I won’t be using poplar at all. We’ll be burning cordwood from the local wood supplier which I think will include a lot of birch.
We usually use the camp for 4-7 days at a time, 3 to 5 times per year, mostly in cold weather.
My question has to do with stove size: How big a stove for this space?
My primary concern is to be able to warm the place with ease on long January nights where temps can - though rarely - drop to -20F, but generally are around 0-10F overnight and 10-20F during the day. So, I’m looking for 8+ hour burn times.
My secondary concern is to not get blown out in the shoulder seasons where overnights are 10-20F warmer.
To keep this specific, at the moment, I am considering Woodstock’s Absolute Steel (2.45 liter firebox) and the Ideal Steel (3.2 liter firebox). I like these and other catalytic stoves because, from what I’ve read here, they can burn at low, steady temps for long periods. Woodstock is also a local, Connecticut River Valley company.
Would the Absolute be adequate on long January overnights? Would the Ideal blow us out in the shoulder seasons?
Thanks in advance for your thoughts.