Hello all. I am new to this forum but not to wood burning. Spent a lot of time here the last month researching a replacement stove. So thanks to you all for sharing your experience and knowledge.
A little history, many years ago I spent a year cleaning out a wooded lot selling the wood. Got me interested in wood stoves. When we bought a house, first thing we did was a new roof and a chimney. Got a small decorative stove that barely put out heat. The next year was a Dutch West with cat that served us well for 18 years. The roof of the fire box came apart so the cat no longer worked. Replaced it with a Quadrafire 3100. Nice stove but short heat cycles and 12 inch logs. The following year we put in a Jøtul Oslo 400. Great stove, very well built. But six arm loads of wood a day to keep it hot. Last week, thanks to this forum, we installed a Blaze King Ashford 30. Only been 5 days but so far three arm loads of wood a day. I have to agree that it uses a third less wood. And the burn time is about 9 hours, just set it and go to work. Still hot when I get home.
So a few things I have learned. EPA does not care about your needs. A large fire box does not equate to a longer, hotter burning fire. Those tubes that burn smoke do so inside the fire box and do not produce anymore heat than a normal controlled fire will. And a cat does not have to glow red to be working.
I would have bought another Dutch West but the dealer said it won’t last with a six month long fire in it. The iron used is not a very good cast anymore. Still, if it was only say 800 dollars a would have. But not for 3000 there asking. I think a cat stove rocks. So I traded the Oslo in for a Blaze King. Been working on engines my whole life and have seen the effects and failures of cleaner burning. I have also seen the heat produced from catalyst. I also used the cat stove to melt candles from six feet away, don’t try that at home, so it makes perfect sense to me. So far I am very happy with this stove and thanks again for all that have posted on this forum. Fumbles
A little history, many years ago I spent a year cleaning out a wooded lot selling the wood. Got me interested in wood stoves. When we bought a house, first thing we did was a new roof and a chimney. Got a small decorative stove that barely put out heat. The next year was a Dutch West with cat that served us well for 18 years. The roof of the fire box came apart so the cat no longer worked. Replaced it with a Quadrafire 3100. Nice stove but short heat cycles and 12 inch logs. The following year we put in a Jøtul Oslo 400. Great stove, very well built. But six arm loads of wood a day to keep it hot. Last week, thanks to this forum, we installed a Blaze King Ashford 30. Only been 5 days but so far three arm loads of wood a day. I have to agree that it uses a third less wood. And the burn time is about 9 hours, just set it and go to work. Still hot when I get home.
So a few things I have learned. EPA does not care about your needs. A large fire box does not equate to a longer, hotter burning fire. Those tubes that burn smoke do so inside the fire box and do not produce anymore heat than a normal controlled fire will. And a cat does not have to glow red to be working.
I would have bought another Dutch West but the dealer said it won’t last with a six month long fire in it. The iron used is not a very good cast anymore. Still, if it was only say 800 dollars a would have. But not for 3000 there asking. I think a cat stove rocks. So I traded the Oslo in for a Blaze King. Been working on engines my whole life and have seen the effects and failures of cleaner burning. I have also seen the heat produced from catalyst. I also used the cat stove to melt candles from six feet away, don’t try that at home, so it makes perfect sense to me. So far I am very happy with this stove and thanks again for all that have posted on this forum. Fumbles