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BUILD-IN WOOD FIREPLACE COMPARISON PAGE

Sorted By: HEATING EFFICIENCY

Sweepy

The new EPA approved woodstoves are not only kinder to the environment, they offer a bonus: since the secondary burn that cleans up the emissions also creates a great deal of free heat, EPA approved woodstoves will heat the same area as their non-approved ancestors while burning much less wood. This translates into heating efficiencies that are nearly double the industry standard of just a few years ago.

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Model
Viewing
Window
Framing
Dimensions
Shipping
Weight
Firebox
Size
Hardwood
Capacity
Max. Log
Length
Heating
Efficiency
EPA
Emissions
Maximum
Output
Average
Output
Heating
Capacity
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 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
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.

Q: Greetings,
I'm just beginning to educate myself on modern-day wood stoves (been using a Fisher for decades) and I've seen stoves online for example, where one has an efficiency rating of, say, 75% with emissions at 3.5 gm/hr., and another stove will have efficiency of 72% w/ emissions at 2.3. I can't make sense of that. Can you shed some light on how these calculations are derived?
Thank you
Roger

SweepyHi Roger,

Thanks for the inquiry! A woodstove's heating efficiency rating doesn't correlate directly to its emissions rating. In fact, those numbers are arrived at in two different tests:

Emissions testing is performed in EPA-approved test labs using the EPA's prescribed protocol. When testing for emissions, a nailed-together "charge" of dimensional Pine is burned, and the particulate matter in the exhaust is measured throughout the duration of several fires at various draft control settings. In this way, an average grams/hour particulate emissions rating is derived. Heating efficiency is not measured during EPA emissions testing.

Heating Efficiency testing is performed using full loads of seasoned cordwood, and is designed to measure how much of the heat value contained in the wood is extracted and delivered into the living space. When testing for heating efficiency, the following criteria are examined:

Extraction Efficiency: the load is weighed going in, and the particulate emissions and ashes are weighed after the fire to determine how effectively a given firebox design breaks down the fuel to extract the available heat.

Heat Transfer Efficiency: this testing is performed in calorimeter rooms equipped with temperature sensors. Similar temperature sensors are installed in the exhaust flue. The degree changes in the room and flue are monitored for the duration of the test fires to determine how much of the heat extracted by the fire is delivered into the room, as compared to the heat lost up the flue.

Although a low emissions weight can improve a given stove's Extraction Efficiency score, the total amount of particulate emissions produced by today's EPA approved woodstoves is so small that the affect of particulate emissions on the overall heating efficiency score is negligable. Thus, even a model with an unusually low Emissions rating doesn't necessarily score a high Heating Efficiency rating.

Consider the two models you mention: the 1.2 gram/hr difference would lighten the total weight of emissions from the cleaner-burning stove by about 10 grams at the end of an 8-hour test burn. Most likely, those 10 grams would be found in the ash remaining in the firebox, eliminating any advantage in Extraction Efficiency. Even if the 10 grams weren't found in the ashes, a difference of 10 grams of particulates from a 40 lb. load of wood would only amount to a .06% advantage in Extraction Efficiency, which would have virtually no affect on the overall Heating Efficiency score.

To read more about woodstove efficiency testing, from the viewpoint of the test labs, click here.

 

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