Well, after many weeks of vacillating between installing a pellet stove vs a wood stove, I finally bit the bullet and chose this Castine to put in our old-fashioned fireplace. We've been in this house (a small cape in NH) for 4 years now and have enjoyed many a blazing fire here. Trouble was, though the fire would warm the immediate area, it was a net heat loss for the house. The upstairs and other rooms would get mighty chilly.
Since we put in this stove, the house has been much toastier. Over the past few weeks I stacked another cord (now I have about 1.75 cords) on the back porch and a bit in the garage. Buying seasoned wood this time of year is not such a great option ($295/cord), so in the spring I'll pick up a couple of green cords.
Though stacking wood, and splitting the many logs that needed it, is a bit of a chore, I have no regrets. I just couldn't bring myself to get a pellet stove, which seemed to have the charm of a blow torch. The nice ambience of burning logs-- and the powerful heat it generates-- is worth the extra work to me (but ask me again in ten years!).
During the installation, I was a bit concerned to see the installer squeeze the stainless liner through the 4-inch damper opening. It was evident that this reduced the pipe volume by at least 25%, but he said he did this all the time with no ill effects. It certainly was a less drastic approach than chiseling open the damper opening, as another stove guy told me was necessary a few years ago. As it happens, the stove still has a very powerful draft, so I can say for the record that ovalizing stainless liner through a 4-inch damper does indeed work OK. (We have a chimney that's 17 feet tall (from the damper to the top)-- the back of the chimney abuts with an unheated garage, so it's virtually an outside chimney).
Anyway, here's a photo. I cleaned up the hearth as best as I could before the installation, using a wire brush and some brick-cleaning spray I picked up at a stove shop. I used a facemask (the kind generally used for sanding wood) and it was dark gray when I finished scraping off the creosote.
Andy
Since we put in this stove, the house has been much toastier. Over the past few weeks I stacked another cord (now I have about 1.75 cords) on the back porch and a bit in the garage. Buying seasoned wood this time of year is not such a great option ($295/cord), so in the spring I'll pick up a couple of green cords.
Though stacking wood, and splitting the many logs that needed it, is a bit of a chore, I have no regrets. I just couldn't bring myself to get a pellet stove, which seemed to have the charm of a blow torch. The nice ambience of burning logs-- and the powerful heat it generates-- is worth the extra work to me (but ask me again in ten years!).
During the installation, I was a bit concerned to see the installer squeeze the stainless liner through the 4-inch damper opening. It was evident that this reduced the pipe volume by at least 25%, but he said he did this all the time with no ill effects. It certainly was a less drastic approach than chiseling open the damper opening, as another stove guy told me was necessary a few years ago. As it happens, the stove still has a very powerful draft, so I can say for the record that ovalizing stainless liner through a 4-inch damper does indeed work OK. (We have a chimney that's 17 feet tall (from the damper to the top)-- the back of the chimney abuts with an unheated garage, so it's virtually an outside chimney).
Anyway, here's a photo. I cleaned up the hearth as best as I could before the installation, using a wire brush and some brick-cleaning spray I picked up at a stove shop. I used a facemask (the kind generally used for sanding wood) and it was dark gray when I finished scraping off the creosote.
Andy