Some questions:
1) I am looking to buy a hearth-mount woodstove and every dealer I go to tries to sell me a wood-burning fireplace insert. My wife and I really like the idea of a stove, and know that if we get one we really love, we'd be able to take it with us if we moved. We're not looking to move right now, but it is definately a possibility in the next 5-10 years, and we imagine our future stove lasting much longer than that! My understanding of the advantage of inserts is that they save space in a room. This would not be an issue as the room is big, the floor plan is open, and we want the stove to stick out a bit to efficiently heat the room and be the focal point of the room. We'd also want to make our nightly cup of hot tea on top, maybe a pot of soup or some popcorn, etc. The stove would be part of our home and life in a way an insert can't. So why is everyone trying to sell me an insert?!? It's actually starting to get frustrating. Is there something I'm missing here?
2) The existing fireplace has a stainless steel flue liner inside a 12x12 clay tile liner. The previous owner had this stainless liner installed, and it is approx. 10 or 11" diameter (fills the pipe pretty good, but I did not measure it). The liner goes from the chimeny cap down to the top of the smoke chamber (about 1 or 2 feet above the smoke shelf). It does NOT go all the way down to the damper. One dealer said they'd have to run a 6" diameter stainless flu liner inside the 10 or 11" one to have an adequate draft. Is this reasonable or are they trying to prop up sales? I was not counting on a new liner, which they said would be at least $600. With this and having to expand the hearth we are bordering on not being able to afford it. Is there a way to join the 6" stove exhaust to the existing liner? Would this result in problems like backpuffing? I don't want to spend any money that isn't truly needed.
3) The stoves I'm looking at are small enough to at least partly recess into the old fireplace. Is this wise? While we want to cook on the stove, we don't want it in the middle of the room, either. Can I go back about 6" or so without dramatically affecting the heat output to the room? The chimney is partly inside the house, partly outside. Will the thermal mass of the chimney bricks trap heat and release it slowly, similar to a soapstone effect?
I'm relatively new to this group and really appreciate your patience and your help!
1) I am looking to buy a hearth-mount woodstove and every dealer I go to tries to sell me a wood-burning fireplace insert. My wife and I really like the idea of a stove, and know that if we get one we really love, we'd be able to take it with us if we moved. We're not looking to move right now, but it is definately a possibility in the next 5-10 years, and we imagine our future stove lasting much longer than that! My understanding of the advantage of inserts is that they save space in a room. This would not be an issue as the room is big, the floor plan is open, and we want the stove to stick out a bit to efficiently heat the room and be the focal point of the room. We'd also want to make our nightly cup of hot tea on top, maybe a pot of soup or some popcorn, etc. The stove would be part of our home and life in a way an insert can't. So why is everyone trying to sell me an insert?!? It's actually starting to get frustrating. Is there something I'm missing here?
2) The existing fireplace has a stainless steel flue liner inside a 12x12 clay tile liner. The previous owner had this stainless liner installed, and it is approx. 10 or 11" diameter (fills the pipe pretty good, but I did not measure it). The liner goes from the chimeny cap down to the top of the smoke chamber (about 1 or 2 feet above the smoke shelf). It does NOT go all the way down to the damper. One dealer said they'd have to run a 6" diameter stainless flu liner inside the 10 or 11" one to have an adequate draft. Is this reasonable or are they trying to prop up sales? I was not counting on a new liner, which they said would be at least $600. With this and having to expand the hearth we are bordering on not being able to afford it. Is there a way to join the 6" stove exhaust to the existing liner? Would this result in problems like backpuffing? I don't want to spend any money that isn't truly needed.
3) The stoves I'm looking at are small enough to at least partly recess into the old fireplace. Is this wise? While we want to cook on the stove, we don't want it in the middle of the room, either. Can I go back about 6" or so without dramatically affecting the heat output to the room? The chimney is partly inside the house, partly outside. Will the thermal mass of the chimney bricks trap heat and release it slowly, similar to a soapstone effect?
I'm relatively new to this group and really appreciate your patience and your help!