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BUILD-IN WOOD FIREPLACE COMPARISON PAGE

Sorted By: SUSTAINED OUTPUT (6-8 HOUR BURN)

Sweepy

While it might be possible to heat a large house with a small woodstove if you crank the draft control wide open and stand by to add fuel every few minutes, the preferred method is to choose a larger stove and refuel less often. The industry standard for airtights on a low draft setting is a 6-8 hour, "all night" fire, with coals left at the end of the burn to ignite a fresh load. This column shows the average output over a long burn.

To sort the table, click the column header (ie;  Viewing Window, Framing Dimensions, etc.)

To exit the table, close this window

Model
Viewing
Window
Framing
Dimensions
Shipping
Weight
Firebox
Size
Hardwood
Capacity
Max. Log
Length
Heating
Efficiency
EPA
Emissions
Maximum
Output
Average
Output
Heating
Capacity
Pacific Energy FP30 Wood Fireplace
Pacific Energy
FP30
10"t
18-1/2"w
185 sq.in.
63-1/2" T
56" W
24" D
625
lbs
3
cubic ft
60
lbs
20"
76.8%
2.47
grams/hr
99,000
btu
48,392
btu/hr
2000 - 3000
sq ft
Hearthstone Montgomery WFP-75 Wood Fireplace
Hearthstone
Montgomery WFP-75
10"t
24"w
240 sq.in.
47-1/16" T
37-13/16" W
27-1/4" D
620
lbs
2.5
cubic ft
50
lbs
20"
77%
4.4
grams/hr
75,000
btu
38,670
btu/hr
1200 - 2000
sq ft
Pacific Energy FP25 Wood Fireplace
Pacific Energy
FP25
9-1.2"t
17-1/4"w
164 sq.in.
62" T
56" W
24" D
595
lbs
2.5
cubic ft
50
lbs
18"
72.6%
3.47
grams/hr
85,000
btu
36,460
btu/hr
1200 - 1800
sq ft
Pacific Energy FP16 Wood Fireplace
Pacific Energy
FP16
9-3/4"t
15-3/8"w
150 sq.in.
55-1/2" T
42" W
24" D
360
lbs
1.6
cubic ft
32
lbs
16"
70.2
3.09
grams/hr
70,000
btu
22,562
btu/hr
800 - 1200
sq ft

 To visit any fireplace's page, click its photo in the table above.

Sweepy Note: Output ratings can be confusing. To read about the difference between EPA ratings, Maximum Output ratings and the 8-hour burn ratings shown in the blue column above, click here.

Mathematicians: In order to compute the heat output of a given wood stove over a given period of time, we need to know the heat value contained in a full load of wood, the efficiency at which the woodstove delivers that heat, and the duration of the burn. We derived our sustained burn comparison figures using the formula below:

( firebox size in cu. in.) x ( 0.015 ) x ( 6200 ) x ( stove efficiency ) / ( burn time )

To get the firebox size in cubic inches, we multiplied the cubic foot measurement from the chart above by 1728.

The 0.015 is the weight of the load per cubic inch. To get this number, we used an average of the top 60 species from our firewood comparison chart, and adjusted to compensate for airspace between pieces.

The 6200 is the available BTU (heat) content per pound of fuelwood at 20% moisture content.

For stove efficiency, we use the manufacturer's published rating.

For burn time we used 6 or 8 hours, depending upon firebox size, which is an industry standard we know all our woodstoves can meet (even the little guys, if you're burning top-of-the-chart hardwoods).

Note that the average btu/hr rating derived by this formula does not reflect how the heat is actually delivered over the course of the fire. In the real world, a fresh load of wood delivers much more heat toward the beginning of the fire when the gasified resins are being consumed, then gradually delivers less and less heat as the fire proceeds through the charcoaling process. This actually works out quite well, as it takes more btu's to bring a cold house up to temperature than it does to maintain that temperature.

 

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