When cranked on the weekends, I burn a wheel barrow full a day. The stove area is a hangout place when the kids come home from their apts in NY, NJ and MA!You? In Boston? You already complain it's too cold in Virginia!
Attn: Bart. He said "Firelight," not "Fireview".
Personally, I think the Firelight is the best looking "big" stove on the market. I have two:
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On the wood usage, go back and read my prior post. Think 0.5 - 1.0 cord per week per stove, in that sort of space. It can be done, but it's not for the average Joe.
I can't find even one video on YouTube that shows one of those hand-trucks climbing stairs.
Also I am pretty sure that the "800 lb" weight limit is only 250 lbs when climbing stairs.
Whoops.
Uh, it's me who should be blushing. I wrote "Fireview", however, I actually meant Firelight. I had gone back to change it and noticed your reply. Thought no one would notice it.
Wow, mind blown.
Saving money however on oil when the total square footage of the house is 7800sqft sounds a little to hopeful though.
I don't think a single stove will get any part of that place "too hot" unless you put a chair against the viewing glass.You will not have the usual concern of "getting too hot in the stove room".
Look into MA tax energy credits...Joful is correct in how I am thinking. Any money I spend and burn on cord wood I save 3x that dollar amount in saved oil. It won't come close to eliminating buying oil, but it is still a few thousand dollars, and has the bonus of giving my son a choir of bringing in wood and the ambiance of the unit.
I would not put in a wood furnace - that is $20K I could put toward geothermal.
I am wondering though if I should spend the estimated $100K it would be to put in geothermal. I am predicting a 15 year payoff which is not too exciting, but if oil prices went up, then that would shorten. I called the gas company and they assured me that they have no plans of putting natural gas on the street in the coming years.
I would not put in a wood furnace - that is $20K I could put toward geothermal.
I'm no HVAC expert but that seems very high considering you have existing ducts, eh?
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