Hello all. I am new. I live in central KY and my wife and I will be purchasing a wood stove this summer for our home. We are new to wood heat. This seemed like a great resource and would appreciate any input offered.
Our home is all electric with a heat pump. Now you know why im here. Lol we have good windows and really well insulated. The house is 3000 sqft but 1000 of that is basement which we are not concerned with. The main floor is 1100 sqft with a vaulted great room, 18ft ceiling that goes all the way up. The second floor is 800 sqft. Three bedooms off the landing upstairs and master, kitchen dining downstairs etc....
We thought about an indoor wood furnace in basement but like the idea of a woodstove better. With 2000sqft to heat, any ideas?
Get your wood NOW!
So, what is the consensus on the Drolet stoves? That Myriad is awfully hard to pass up for the price. And the free shipping to the store would be worth the 90 miles drive to pick it up.
<- - - not a fan.
I look at a wood stove as a 20 year investment. What's $600 over 20 years (answer $30 per year)? Or $1000 (do your own math)? Why buy a cut rate product with a sketchy past from a box store that doesn't know the first thing about heating with wood? Why not get the stove you want?
<- - - not a fan.
I look at a wood stove as a 20 year investment. What's $600 over 20 years (answer $30 per year)? Or $1000 (do your own math)? Why buy a cut rate product with a sketchy past from a box store that doesn't know the first thing about heating with wood? Why not get the stove you want?
Anyone notice the OP hasn't been around? Kindred got a stove, thanks in part to this thread, but Creekheat hasn't chimed in.
What experience do you have with Drolet stoves that would make you say they are cut rate? Inexpensive doesn't always mean poor quality. I just moved into a new home and have several projects that I would like to complete. $2000 for a top-shelf stove may not seem like much over 20 years, but if I can get satisfactory performance and save money it seems like a no-brainer to me. I can do a lot with that extra $1300.
As far as buying from a box store, well I'm a DIY guy and will be doing my own install. I doubt a local dealer will be much help on a self-install anyway. Besides, that's what hearth.com is for!
I'd like you to back up your statement, "Why buy a cut rate product with a sketchy past ......" with some proof. Thank you.
Isn't it self evident? A $600 stove from a national big box hardware store?
Also, I'm not saying they can't or won't heat. I'm saying he/she's got to look at and live with the thing every friggin' day for decades so why shop at the bottom of the market?
After some research i was thinking all steel. Lopi, quadrafire, countryside, hearthside. I dont want soap or cast.
No it really isn't self evident, which is why I asked. My last stove was a Englander insert from a big box store. I might have paid $850 for it and couldn't have been happier. That little thing would run us out of our non-insulated, drafty, 1940s house with temps routinely over 80 degrees. It is still in great condition and will be going into my workshop soon. Again, inexpensive doesn't mean junk. I'd like to know if you have any first-hand experience or if your opinion is based solely on the price point.
As for looks, well it looks like any other basic steel stove. Won't win any beauty contests, but I'm ok with that.
hey guys. i'm still here. lol I work some crazy hours and have been doing as much research as I can on woodstoves, etc... which is how I roll. Obsess over something until your head pops off which is where I am headed...lol anyway, thanks for all the input so far. As I said I think we have decided on a wood stove. now which brand? I like the steel stoves best I think. looked at Lopi Liberty, Country ST310 models such as those. so if I am heating 2000sq ft. is it wise to get one that does 2000 sqft minimum? or is this overkill? the ST310 will do 2000-3500 so will it "overheat"? also i have archways in between some rooms, will that kill my heat transfer from room to room? and as if that wasnt enough how about more questions! lol cat or non cat? I understand the science but have heard cat stoves don't last as long and are more expensive to maintain....when i started this i was thinking throw some wood in a box....now I know why there are forums...lol thanks in advance! i'll post some pics if i can figure out how.
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