So hopefully you die hard wood folks don't get tired of these newbie questions - I could really use your help.
We are building and putting a stove in the finished basement family room. I will have all the oak, hickory, locust, and other hardwood I can use here near St. Louis. Would like to use splits on the bigger side.
I'd like to be able to reduce our LP furnace usage and gain some house heating from the unit, but still be able to comfortably enjoy being in that room. What should my considerations be for choosing the right stove?
Total house sq ft? Longer shoulder seasons in my zone 6 area? Stove material?
Here are a few numbers: Finished basement 1200 sq ft, first floor 2000, second 838. Total about 4100.
I'm Ok with loading twice a day, and would like to enjoy the fire show.
Is it either one or the other -big stove with good heat throughout the house or smaller stove you can be in the same room with?
Thanks - already spent hours reading lots of great content from really helpful people here.
We are building and putting a stove in the finished basement family room. I will have all the oak, hickory, locust, and other hardwood I can use here near St. Louis. Would like to use splits on the bigger side.
I'd like to be able to reduce our LP furnace usage and gain some house heating from the unit, but still be able to comfortably enjoy being in that room. What should my considerations be for choosing the right stove?
Total house sq ft? Longer shoulder seasons in my zone 6 area? Stove material?
Here are a few numbers: Finished basement 1200 sq ft, first floor 2000, second 838. Total about 4100.
I'm Ok with loading twice a day, and would like to enjoy the fire show.
Is it either one or the other -big stove with good heat throughout the house or smaller stove you can be in the same room with?
Thanks - already spent hours reading lots of great content from really helpful people here.