My sweet taters got burnt......and my face wind burnt...Ans the protus house all slept in one room with the heater...even with our heater going...rest of the house was mid 60 f..if I didn't run it we would have had indoor temps into the high 40' s . It was 53 f when momma p got in last night before I got home....its 65 now inside and I'm cold.LOL must be getting older LOL
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
it is cold! and getting colder... what are you doing to prepare?
Collapse
X
-
rr sorry to hear about frozen pipes that is no fun at all... Protus sorry to here you lost your taters but sounds like you are taking care of business with keeping warm... Tech with you "unusual temps" for you that cold I think you are going to lose a lot of plants back to the ground if not totally. And that will suck for years...
Comment
-
I was a Florida boy for over three decades, been in VA since 2005, so I am relatively new to all this winter heat, wood stove, fireplace stuff... I installed a blessed find of a Buderus oil-fired boiler at the local Habitat Store after several winters of breakdown hell with an old POS and installed that several years ago. It purrs like a kitten and burns clean, but it still uses EXPENSIVE #2 heating oil (diesel).
But the survivalist in me wanted a wood stove.... So was again blessed at the same Habitat store and found a nice, glass front, heavy sheet steel wood stove insert and installed it this fall. Has two blowers that blow air around the burn chamber and vent out the front top. Uses every BTU of heat...
But here are some things I am learning...
Wood stoves put out a lot of heat for not much wood, but need to be tended more than I would like, especially if I am busy doing something else, like outside... Also, unless you get up a few times through the night (yeah, as if I would naturally do that), the fire dies down and is burned to ashes by morning and the inside temp then triggers the oil heat to kick on. Which means re-starting it in the morning if it is the weekend...
My pre-sleeptime video from Monday night with just wood heat...
So I am really seeing why a PELLET stove is so popular... As long as you have some low-watt power, they just feed, and feed, and feed until you run out of pellets or your turn it off... Also, much easier to regulate the temp you want by just adjusting the feed rate. I think I may add a small one some day and use my other flue that is not in use now and once used to be for a wood stove on the other side of the centrally-placed fireplace. That way I can have a smooth-running pellet stove near the bedrooms and hall and then have the romantic brass and glass front wood stove insert for non-sleeping times and for PAW. Leaving the oil heat for times when no one is home yet we still need heat...
Just things I am picking up real fast this winter...
RmplLast edited by Rmplstlskn; 01-08-2014, 10:23 PM.-=> Rmplstlskn <=-
Comment
-
Protus, have you considered a kerosene heater or is kero too expensive in the bikini state?
I keep two here at my house for emergencies like a winter power outage and I have one at my BOL that we use to save on propane.
The one at the trailer is a Kerosun that I bought in 1980 and that thing is great. its 10,000 BTUs and I built a cart for it so we can move it to whatever room we are in.
K 1 Kerosene can be bought at many gas stations here for around $4.10 a gallon.
I see tons of kreo heaters on Craigslist for $40-$50.
Comment
-
You might look into Rocket Mass Heaters they use very little wood and the thermal mass retains the heat for hours.Originally posted by Rmplstlskn View PostI was a Florida boy for over three decades, been in VA since 2005, so I am relatively new to all this winter heat, wood stove, fireplace stuff... I installed a blessed find of a Buderus oil-fired boiler at the local Habitat Store after several winters of breakdown hell with an old POS and installed that several years ago. It purrs like a kitten and burns clean, but it still uses EXPENSIVE #2 heating oil (diesel).
[ATTACH=CONFIG]2296[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=CONFIG]2298[/ATTACH]
But the survivalist in me wanted a wood stove.... So was again blessed at the same Habitat store and found a nice, glass front, heavy sheet steel wood stove insert and installed it this fall. Has two blowers that blow air around the burn chamber and vent out the front top. Uses every BTU of heat...
[ATTACH=CONFIG]2297[/ATTACH]
But here are some things I am learning...
Wood stoves put out a lot of heat for not much wood, but need to be tended more than I would like, especially if I am busy doing something else, like outside... Also, unless you get up a few times through the night (yeah, as if I would naturally do that), the fire dies down and is burned to ashes by morning and the inside temp then triggers the oil heat to kick on. Which means re-starting it in the morning if it is the weekend...
My pre-sleeptime video from Monday night with just wood heat...
So I am really seeing why a PELLET stove is so popular... As long as you have some low-watt power, they just feed, and feed, and feed until you run out of pellets or your turn it off... Also, much easier to regulate the temp you want by just adjusting the feed rate. I think I may add a small one some day and use my other flue that is not in use now and once used to be for a wood stove on the other side of the centrally-placed fireplace. That way I can have a smooth-running pellet stove near the bedrooms and hall and then have the romantic brass and glass front wood stove insert for non-sleeping times and for PAW. Leaving the oil heat for times when no one is home yet we still need heat...
Just things I am picking up real fast this winter...
Rmpl
"It's a trap!!!!" -- Admiral Ackbar
Comment
-
If I were to build a house from scratch, or gut one for a remodel, I would build a "Tulikivi Soapstone" Fireplace... Those things are amazingly efficient and warm the entire house with radiant heat...Originally posted by 610Alpha View PostYou might look into Rocket Mass Heaters they use very little wood and the thermal mass retains the heat for hours.

It would have to be PAW for my wife to allow me to build a stove with rocks and a steel barrel in "her" livingroom... Just say'in... I pick my battles wisely...
Rmpl-=> Rmplstlskn <=-
Comment
-
I can only wonder what the cost difference would be to build that vs RMH? I can imagine that the RMH could be camouflaged so that it would be aesthetically pleasing to the eye, you may not have the view of the fire per se.Originally posted by Rmplstlskn View PostIf I were to build a house from scratch, or gut one for a remodel, I would build a "Tulikivi Soapstone" Fireplace... Those things are amazingly efficient and warm the entire house with radiant heat...

It would have to be PAW for my wife to allow me to build a stove with rocks and a steel barrel in "her" livingroom... Just say'in... I pick my battles wisely...
Rmpl
Thanks for the pic, I had not heard of these."It's a trap!!!!" -- Admiral Ackbar
Comment
Comment