SO - first year with the Englander 30. Big fire box, heat from hell, blah blah blah. It's -17 outside and I'm attempting to heat 2500 sf of not-so-very-tight and semi-decently insulated living space. 2-story, stove is in the great room, near an open stairway. The stove is installed in an existing masonry fireplace, with a direct connect liner and block-off plate: actually, a big sheet of steel even with the lintel, with a hole cut through to allow the liner to pass.
My wife is home all day (for the most part) and I'm at work. She swears up and down that adding two or three splits at a time keeps the firebox in that 500ish degree range. Last night comes, and she ends up "sleeping" on the couch, because she has to add wood every hour or two (-20 last night) in order to keep the house at 60 degrees or better without running the LP furnace.
I am of the opinion, based on limited experience, that we would be better off cleaning out the ash (and some coals to be honest) and packing the stove full. We're obviously asking for more than the stove should reasonably be able to provide. I understand this. As a result, I'm needing to clean out coals in order to load it full as often as is necessary to heat the space required. Probably not the most efficient use of wood, but it's cheaper than running the gas hog and I'm loaded to the gills with well seasoned slab wood and a couple of cords of nice oak.
So - what say ye gentlemen? A few splits at a time, and often, or load it to the gills and let 'er burn - even if I have to remove coals to do so?
My wife is home all day (for the most part) and I'm at work. She swears up and down that adding two or three splits at a time keeps the firebox in that 500ish degree range. Last night comes, and she ends up "sleeping" on the couch, because she has to add wood every hour or two (-20 last night) in order to keep the house at 60 degrees or better without running the LP furnace.
I am of the opinion, based on limited experience, that we would be better off cleaning out the ash (and some coals to be honest) and packing the stove full. We're obviously asking for more than the stove should reasonably be able to provide. I understand this. As a result, I'm needing to clean out coals in order to load it full as often as is necessary to heat the space required. Probably not the most efficient use of wood, but it's cheaper than running the gas hog and I'm loaded to the gills with well seasoned slab wood and a couple of cords of nice oak.
So - what say ye gentlemen? A few splits at a time, and often, or load it to the gills and let 'er burn - even if I have to remove coals to do so?