ssman said:
What about all furnaces and water heaters? All of these require combustion and emit exhaust and they don't require OAKs. Where is all their makeup air coming from? So I guess if you own one of these units you will need to put an OAK on it too!
You should. High-efficiency appliances require or at least offer the ability to use outdoor air.
Sealed combustion is the best way to go.
Liter of Cola said:
If you cut the hole for an OAK, the cold air is drawn directly into the stove, meaning that this cold air is constantly cooling off the stove, and you have to "burn more pellets" to heat the stove.
The inefficiency in a stove is not in the combustion, itself. Combustion air that is 20 degrees colder does not mean a flame that is 20 degrees colder. You could put a larger and larger heat exchanger on a given system, and cool the exhaust more (combustion efficiency is the difference between the flame temp and the exhaust temp). However, if you did that, there would be problems of draft and corrosion and soot, because the exhaust was too cool.
The amount of energy the system will waste is fixed by that, regardless of the amount of energy that it consumes in combustion. Colder air means it needs to consume more energy to pre-heat that air, but that extra energy is captured by the system in order to cool the flue gas just enough, but not too much. The energy has to go somewhere - into your house. Colder air (as long as it is not so cold that it interferes with proper combustion) will actually increase efficiency. It sounds counter-intuitive, but the thermodynamics do work out.
If your house is tight enough that it needs additional fresh air, replace a bathroom vent with a HRV, and install a ventilation controller to turn it on as needed.
Joe