Yea its a cabinet that they sell at tractor supply. If I put a damper in would that help? My last stove did not have one and I was always curious if they played a role in burn time.Is this the cabinet heater? Maybe 6-8 hrs with the air throttled down?
I like to have a flue damper on this type of stove unless the chimney is quite short. Just remember to open it first before reloading. If not, you will get a snoot full of smoke.
What will you be connecting it to?
Begreen makes a good point as well we had to have a damper to control it properly otherwise it would race off in high wind days also it would lose heat out the flue before you could heat the house with it.Our first stove in this house was a us stove wonderwood is that the stove ? If so how old is it ? Do you have a picture and how much ?
It got terrible burn times and poor heat output for us but that is all relative to the size of your house and how dry your wood is. My grandmother used it for 10 years in a 1000square foot house and it did excelent aside from burn times. in our house which was drafty before insulation and 1500 square foot it was not very good. It only put out good heat with really dry wood and an enormous coal bed. We had to fill it every couple of hours and used a lot of wood. It was usless without a fan as well however with the fan it did decent. Over all it was not bad but it was not EPA either ! The newer ones I am sure do better because they camt sell non epa stoves now. In our experience it was a price point stove.
Pete
I have an 8" chimney about 15' long, does the flue damper actually slow the rate of burn down?
I have an 8" chimney about 15' long, does the flue damper actually slow the rate of burn down?
The newer ones I am sure do better because they camt sell non epa stoves now.
Please be sure it's legal in your state. Here in Washington, I'm pretty sure you can't even legally buy a new epa exempt, but that may just be us and I think Oregon and Calif.
Well, I'm not sure just how those laws read, the idea is that they don't want them installed. Washington is particularly tough with stoves. Some EPA approved stoves can't be installed when they exceed something like 4.5 grams which is less than EPA's limit. I just wouldn't want jimmyjon to have trouble with permits or anything.Every man who fought for the freedom of this country is rolling in his grave right now.
Yea unfortunately I have to have a rear flue for my installation though.Good luck Jim! For a little more you could have bought an EPA rated Englander. They probably are double the weight of the Wonderwood and quite popular here especially the 30NC..
Ray
Hopefully it performs well so you don't get discouraged from wood burning. Save your pennies now for a good epa stove later. There are quite a few rear exhaust stoves available such as the Woodstock soapstone which are extremely popular, well made and high performing for a reasonable price. Keep us posted as to how it works for out for you Jim and post pics tooYea unfortunately I have to have a rear flue for my installation though.
Woodstock soapstone ... for a reasonable price.
No more expensive that a Jotul and less than BK.. They are on sale almost all the time.. http://www.woodstove.com/sale I paid about that for my T-5.. They have sales that even cheaper than this as well..Really? I had always heard here that Woodstocks were at the high end of the price spectrum.
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