But the difference in price is way higher than most sellers charge. Here are a couple ads in my neck of the woods...Not uncommon to get a discount with volume. His delivery costs are the same for each portion of a cord.
The Chinook, ugly? I can't help it but every time I look at the Princess I imagine an animated cartoon character, smiley face on the glass door, squatting and puffing smoke from every opening to the tune of " Camptown Races"!I was at a cottage show this weekend and one of the booths had a Chinook 20 on display. Very nice looking stove, pleasing to the eye. Definitely more modern looking which I like and think it would fit my layout better.
Wife still thinks it is "ugly" therefore the Princess it is.
Love that show, well any Alaska show!Anybody watch "Buying Alaska"? BK's pop up kind of regular in the show as people are looking at homes for sale. Just saw another Princess equipped cabin on the show a few minutes ago.
About which stove are you inquiring?If you had a look under the very top of the stove while the combustor was active want would you see? Mostly slow lazy blue flames? or does all pf the combustion happen within the catalyst?
Reason I ask is I am doing a lot of experiments with stoves. my understanding is the dark blue flames are the most chemically efficient. Most carbon dioxide and least amount of particulates and carbon monoxide. it's more obvious on a non cat stove.
For catalytic combustion understanding, try this:
http://www.chimneysweepnews.com/Combustors.htm
An informative read indeed.
Not really. There are two companies that are so far ahead of the rest in the narrow catalytic stove market that, budget aside, it really just comes down to BK or Woodstock.I think at some point I may switch to a cat stove, the hard part will be deciding on which one to get.
If possible, get a steel cat. Less prone to water shock damage and very short start-up time.
My understanding is the steel cats don't last as long...I know there are pros and cons to each style. I'll have to do my homework.
lots of “questionable” wood, often times it was wet and/or icy. I’m yet to see one of my ceramic cats cracked or otherwise degrading.
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