Hi all,
I live in Southern Vermont and am halfway down the track with pricing out a new home construction. Specifically, I'm looking to potentially purchase this home shell and have it finished by a local builder: https://unityhomes.com/home-plans/varm-eda/
The home is ~2600 sf, R-60 roof, R-35 walls, slab on grade, triple pane tilt turn windows and typically results in an ACH50 of ~1. Air source heat pumps as primary heating. The stove would be a corner installation in the living room with an interior chimney chase up the corner. The manufacturer generally tries to get people to go all electric and forgo wood heat as a backup, but I live on acreage and have access to cut/collect/produce however much hardwood I want for the cost of my time (which I enjoy!). Outages are a thing here. Approximately 1/3 of owners install woodstoves anyways. I'm aware of OAKs and the challenges of having a wood stove competing with the ERV and other venting appliances and believe I can handle that. I'm sorry that I don't have energy modeling to share yet.
I currently live in a drafty 1790s cape and am being well served by a Woodstock Absolute Steel and previously ran a Jotul F400 for years, so I'm familiar with hybrids as well as secondary stoves.
My question is -- what would your strategy be for choosing a stove for this particular situation? Large cat stove that I run on low all the time (BK Ashford 30?)? Small secondary burn stove (PE Alderlea T4?) that I only burn when needed? Something in the middle (WS Keystone/Palladian?)?
I'm worried that even a medium secondary burner would overheat the space and I'd be constantly running tiny loads. Alternately, with a larger cat stove, I'm afraid the thermal mass will just be too much.
Thanks!
edit: adding floorplan to original post
I live in Southern Vermont and am halfway down the track with pricing out a new home construction. Specifically, I'm looking to potentially purchase this home shell and have it finished by a local builder: https://unityhomes.com/home-plans/varm-eda/
The home is ~2600 sf, R-60 roof, R-35 walls, slab on grade, triple pane tilt turn windows and typically results in an ACH50 of ~1. Air source heat pumps as primary heating. The stove would be a corner installation in the living room with an interior chimney chase up the corner. The manufacturer generally tries to get people to go all electric and forgo wood heat as a backup, but I live on acreage and have access to cut/collect/produce however much hardwood I want for the cost of my time (which I enjoy!). Outages are a thing here. Approximately 1/3 of owners install woodstoves anyways. I'm aware of OAKs and the challenges of having a wood stove competing with the ERV and other venting appliances and believe I can handle that. I'm sorry that I don't have energy modeling to share yet.
I currently live in a drafty 1790s cape and am being well served by a Woodstock Absolute Steel and previously ran a Jotul F400 for years, so I'm familiar with hybrids as well as secondary stoves.
My question is -- what would your strategy be for choosing a stove for this particular situation? Large cat stove that I run on low all the time (BK Ashford 30?)? Small secondary burn stove (PE Alderlea T4?) that I only burn when needed? Something in the middle (WS Keystone/Palladian?)?
I'm worried that even a medium secondary burner would overheat the space and I'd be constantly running tiny loads. Alternately, with a larger cat stove, I'm afraid the thermal mass will just be too much.
Thanks!
edit: adding floorplan to original post
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