We currently run two wood stoves on the main floor of a 4500 sq ft home (above grade). Its a center hall colonial. We have a Buck 91 in the formal living room and a Hampton 300I in the family room (opposite sides of the home). We heat most of the Virginia year with the two stoves, but in the dead of winter the house is too big (and drafty) to be 100%.
We have a fireplace in the large (900 sq foot) master suite with double doors to the hall which is never used and I am thinking of installing a wood stove to cover those really cold (thats relative in Virginia) months.
I have the opportunity to pick up a nearly new Buck 91 for $750 and am wondering if its worth it to install it in the master bedroom for those couple months.
What do you think? Is it worth considering? We are in Fairfax County and I believe acceptable via code (there already is a fireplace there) to have it in the bedroom and I don't mind hauling the clean wood upstairs for the few months (likely only two) out of the year. I would install an extra CO2 detector near the stove (already have them in the house ).
We are 100% electric heat otherwise and loose power often. The two lower level burners always keep us out of danger of being frozen in a power outage, but it can get cold.
I have a small generator that we use and I run a space heater when required in those outages but have access to a lot of free wood so knocking that $100 plus off the heating bill in those "cold
months" would mean the stove cost would be recovered in a couple years...
Too dangerous or too much work? What do you think?
Thanks!
We have a fireplace in the large (900 sq foot) master suite with double doors to the hall which is never used and I am thinking of installing a wood stove to cover those really cold (thats relative in Virginia) months.
I have the opportunity to pick up a nearly new Buck 91 for $750 and am wondering if its worth it to install it in the master bedroom for those couple months.
What do you think? Is it worth considering? We are in Fairfax County and I believe acceptable via code (there already is a fireplace there) to have it in the bedroom and I don't mind hauling the clean wood upstairs for the few months (likely only two) out of the year. I would install an extra CO2 detector near the stove (already have them in the house ).
We are 100% electric heat otherwise and loose power often. The two lower level burners always keep us out of danger of being frozen in a power outage, but it can get cold.
I have a small generator that we use and I run a space heater when required in those outages but have access to a lot of free wood so knocking that $100 plus off the heating bill in those "cold
months" would mean the stove cost would be recovered in a couple years...
Too dangerous or too much work? What do you think?
Thanks!