I have a new Regency insert in the upstairs portion of my log cabin and it works great until the temp drops below 25 outside. When the temp drops below 25, I can only keep my cabin at around 60 -62. I am realizing that this cabin is not the most insulated. I have a block off plate installed but it is not airtight so I will be sealing that this spring.
There is a finished basement with concrete floors and cinder block walls (three of the walls are below ground and one is exposed) that is equipped with an old Fisher Mama Bear stove. The basement stays around 40 F no matter what the temp is outside in the winter. There is insulation on the basement ceiling.
My question is whether or not people think burning a fire in the basement stove on those really cold days would help heat the upstairs?
There is a finished basement with concrete floors and cinder block walls (three of the walls are below ground and one is exposed) that is equipped with an old Fisher Mama Bear stove. The basement stays around 40 F no matter what the temp is outside in the winter. There is insulation on the basement ceiling.
My question is whether or not people think burning a fire in the basement stove on those really cold days would help heat the upstairs?
. But, if the stove is there, and the chimney is in ready to burn condition, fire it up and find out for yourself whether it helps. When LP gas was cheaper, and we didn't burn wood 24/7, we would usually try to burn wood the coldest 3-4 weeks of the year, and it really made a difference in the amount of gas needed for the winter, and the comfort level in the house.