I have a Wood doctor 8000 heating a 2500 sq ft old farmhouse, recently renovated with blown in insulation, new windows, siding (tyvek underneath) with boiler heat. Before the renovation, the winter gas bill was over $500 a month, and the house never got over 68 degrees. now, my gas bill is nothing, and I can wear shorts in January if I want. BUT, there is NO way it could possibly heat 8000 sq ft efficiently. I have had it 6 seasons now, and it has paid for itself in natural gas savings, but it is one wood eating mother! As a newbie back then myself, I threw any type and dryness of wood in the thing, and it did burn, but smoked like crazy. After years of learning, I now only burn dry wood, mostly hickory, and it does not smoke much at all. I added a 36X48 garage heated with radiant floors to about 50 degrees, and it doesn't seem to be using much more wood than last season. But, and sit down for this one, I am burning nearly 20 ricks a year

(4x8x16") That's a lot more than they claim! I have a buddy that bought one at the same time I did; small ranch house, small barn, still burns 10+ ricks a year...
So, now ask yourself: Do I want to spend my time cutting and splitting wood, or my money on a gasser with storage? Or on a high efficiency gas boiler?
If you decide on outdoor wood heat, dig the trench between the furnace and the house deep and wide, and have a contractor foam it in. Don't scrimp on the little stuff, it adds up quickly in losses!
Honestly, if I had it to do again, I would learn a lot more before my purchase, then make an informed decision. For instance, now, I can buy a modulating boiler that uses a lot less gas than my old inside boiler, AND I don't have to cut wood! AND I get a tax break. But my money is stuck in a wood furnace. So I will live with my decision, and happily cut wood until it dies, then start the process over again!!
Happy Hunting!
Dave