Your home is somewhat larger than ours, but it's probably somewhat more energy efficient. Based on wood consumption and propane use we average about 60-70kbtu/hr over the winter to heat our downstairs to 68*F. Peak demand on very cold days/nites probably hits ~150-180kbtu/hr from our 60 Class boiler. The heat rises and keeps the upstairs to a comfortable low 60's for bedrooms. Our boiler is about 150' underground using 1 1/4" pex. The system would have been happier with 1 1/2" pex, but 1 1/4" works fine. Did you ask him how many boiler systems they have installed. That's the other problem being in the south, just not many people who've done this.
My questions about running the boiler was not health or strength related. There is far more involved than just feeding the boiler. I'll admit, maybe our BioMass may not be as user friendly as the Froling, Vigas, Varm, or some of the other mid to high level boilers, but it's definitely not just feed it and let it run. I don't know how to convey this, but ours requires low level mechanical skills similar to keeping an old car running. Changing plugs, doing brakes, messing with the radiator... etc. Hopefully others can chime in. My wife is athletic, healthy and strong with above average mechanical aptitude, but she would NOT do everything necessary to keep our boiler running properly all season.
Certainly other boilers are probably less demanding. My suggestion is read the EKO and BioMass stickies above. It will give some perspective what some of us go thru to get them and keep them running. It's worthwhile to notice that Froling, Garn, Vigas and some others haven't needed a Sticky.
Not saying you can't, but to my knowledge every poster in those stickies are guys committed to saving their families money burning wood and willing to spend time/energy to do it. I'm just trying to make you aware that there's far more involved than just feeding the beast. And all the extra attention is highly dependent on which boiler you select based on my 7 years hanging out here. Running our wood boiler is nothing like what the BioWin pellet guys describe. I'm trying to give you advice I'd be giving to my daughter. Best wishes.
-Yes I'm going to be the primary person handling everything with the wood to the boiler, etc. I'm in decent shape and I'm fairly young (depending on who you ask!), I believe I can swing that part of it.
My questions about running the boiler was not health or strength related. There is far more involved than just feeding the boiler. I'll admit, maybe our BioMass may not be as user friendly as the Froling, Vigas, Varm, or some of the other mid to high level boilers, but it's definitely not just feed it and let it run. I don't know how to convey this, but ours requires low level mechanical skills similar to keeping an old car running. Changing plugs, doing brakes, messing with the radiator... etc. Hopefully others can chime in. My wife is athletic, healthy and strong with above average mechanical aptitude, but she would NOT do everything necessary to keep our boiler running properly all season.
Certainly other boilers are probably less demanding. My suggestion is read the EKO and BioMass stickies above. It will give some perspective what some of us go thru to get them and keep them running. It's worthwhile to notice that Froling, Garn, Vigas and some others haven't needed a Sticky.
Not saying you can't, but to my knowledge every poster in those stickies are guys committed to saving their families money burning wood and willing to spend time/energy to do it. I'm just trying to make you aware that there's far more involved than just feeding the beast. And all the extra attention is highly dependent on which boiler you select based on my 7 years hanging out here. Running our wood boiler is nothing like what the BioWin pellet guys describe. I'm trying to give you advice I'd be giving to my daughter. Best wishes.