We are closing on a new house this month. It is a Cape Cod – well insulated as it has only had propane fills in Dec. 2010 and Feb 2011 totaling 385 gallons. (Suspect it will need filled in Oct or so and will take about 500 gallons.) Propane is only used for heat. (Has an electric hot water heater – YIKES- that will get immediately changed to a Bosch hydro tankless.)
We are on the west shore of Lake Michigan in lower MI – and you can’t get much further north and still be on Lake Michigan. Interestingly the micro-climate here on the shore is quite mild because of the 300-400 ft high sand dunes. I grow roses that shouldn’t survive north of southern Virginia – growing zone is a 6 a or b while 20 miles east of us it is a frigid zone 5. Definitely not the MI climate experienced by the rest of the state. Big shock if we get a day where the high is in the mid-teens in the winter.
What we do have it the wind roaring off the Lake. And I do mean roaring. This house in only about 5 mile inshore as the crow flies AND at the top of hill coming up from the Lake. The Lake is directly due west of us – the direction the front of the house faces. Do have some excellent mature evergreens as a wind break from the Lake
Now I have uploaded a photo of the floor plan - see 2nd post in thread. It is around 1540 sq feet.
We have had wood stoves before – some were supplemental but could do all heating and others were the heat source. All of them were conventional non-cat cast iron except one which I refer to as “The Pellet Stove From Hell.†Wood will be delivered by very reliable wood suppliers who get it from the surrounding area including the US National Park. Should be maple, ash, some oak and maybe cherry (this is the largest cherry producing area in the US.)
The wood stove is intended to be able to supply 85 -100% of the heat. To get the heat upstairs (see the diagram) I will probably need to do 3 floor vents like the ones in my great-grandparents and grandparents homes and in the homes of the Old Amish that I lived among for a time.
I have narrowed the list to the following which are listed with their data I would rather over-size the stove by at least 20% than not have enough stove.
Hearthstone – Heritage Soapstone 1900 sq ft 50000 btu
Hearthstone – Phoenix Soapstone 2000 60000
Hearthstone – Mansfield Soapstone 2500 80000
Hearthstone Shelburne cast iron 1800 50000
Hearthstone – Bennington Cast iron 2200 70000
Jotul F500 cast iron 2000 70000
Lopi Liberty cast iron 1500 -2500 73400
Vermont Casting – Defiant 2 in 1 cast iron 2400 75000
Woodstock – Progress hybrid soapstone Est 1600 - 2350 80000
Yes I have already spoken to Woodstock about it and the terms of sale on the intro and shipping
As you can see the list leans to (a) conventional non-cat and (b) soapstone. The soapstone stoves have been widely used for decades by the Old Amish I knew –figure that is a pretty good recommendation since they don’t fool about with frou-frou unreliable on essentials.
Now my reservations about the different stoves are this:
(1) Soapstone – great heat, solid workhorses BUT they sound as if they can be bloody touchy about how hot they are allowed to get. This one wants only a temperature of not more than XXX but that one will allow a temperature of a 100 degrees more…… and if they don’t like the heat, the stone breaks. That sounds a little problematic to me …. unless those temperatures are pretty much what a cast iron can take and you don’t have to keep taking the soapstone’s temperature.
(Note: I got really really spoiled by my Waterford wood stoves from back in the ‘90s (EPA and the first secondary burn stoves) that you couldn’t hurt with doing anything less than shoving plastic explosives in them and which burned anything you feed them and forgave all kinds of temperature fluctuations and just kept going and going and going….)
(2) Cast Iron – that 2 of the Hearthstone, the Jotul, the Lopi and the Vermont Castings. The Hearthstones, Jotul and Lopi are pretty much like everything I have always had. The Vermont Castings is that 2 in 1 and I’ll have that Cat out of there in a heartbeat. IF VC made one without the cat in that size, I would have that one on the list instead of 2 in 1. (From what I have read over the years, the VC cats have a seriously nasty habit of making you call for parts and see below on my reservations about cats in general) Interestingly VC is now doing all the stove body casting for Jotul and other…..
(3) Catalytics…… yes, I have read (endlessly) that they are not the disasters they were years ago. Yes, I have read the claims that they aren’t that hard to run so long as you
(a) Only give them certain wood and exactly what they want
(b) Hover over them on start up with small fires and fussing and getting them going
(c) Don’t let them burn too hot too fast
And on and on and on…… and then in addition over the years I keep seeing the threads on this forum titled “Help Did I Ruin My New Cat Stove By (fill in the blank.) Not consistent with my definition of ‘easy to operate.’
The only cat stove to make the list is the new Woodstock – the bigger one. They arranging for some of their local customers to talk to me and show me their Woodstocks. Love the idea of that stove if we go with soapstone – have reservations about the catalytic part.
Cont'd below in another post.
We are on the west shore of Lake Michigan in lower MI – and you can’t get much further north and still be on Lake Michigan. Interestingly the micro-climate here on the shore is quite mild because of the 300-400 ft high sand dunes. I grow roses that shouldn’t survive north of southern Virginia – growing zone is a 6 a or b while 20 miles east of us it is a frigid zone 5. Definitely not the MI climate experienced by the rest of the state. Big shock if we get a day where the high is in the mid-teens in the winter.
What we do have it the wind roaring off the Lake. And I do mean roaring. This house in only about 5 mile inshore as the crow flies AND at the top of hill coming up from the Lake. The Lake is directly due west of us – the direction the front of the house faces. Do have some excellent mature evergreens as a wind break from the Lake
Now I have uploaded a photo of the floor plan - see 2nd post in thread. It is around 1540 sq feet.
We have had wood stoves before – some were supplemental but could do all heating and others were the heat source. All of them were conventional non-cat cast iron except one which I refer to as “The Pellet Stove From Hell.†Wood will be delivered by very reliable wood suppliers who get it from the surrounding area including the US National Park. Should be maple, ash, some oak and maybe cherry (this is the largest cherry producing area in the US.)
The wood stove is intended to be able to supply 85 -100% of the heat. To get the heat upstairs (see the diagram) I will probably need to do 3 floor vents like the ones in my great-grandparents and grandparents homes and in the homes of the Old Amish that I lived among for a time.
I have narrowed the list to the following which are listed with their data I would rather over-size the stove by at least 20% than not have enough stove.
Hearthstone – Heritage Soapstone 1900 sq ft 50000 btu
Hearthstone – Phoenix Soapstone 2000 60000
Hearthstone – Mansfield Soapstone 2500 80000
Hearthstone Shelburne cast iron 1800 50000
Hearthstone – Bennington Cast iron 2200 70000
Jotul F500 cast iron 2000 70000
Lopi Liberty cast iron 1500 -2500 73400
Vermont Casting – Defiant 2 in 1 cast iron 2400 75000
Woodstock – Progress hybrid soapstone Est 1600 - 2350 80000
Yes I have already spoken to Woodstock about it and the terms of sale on the intro and shipping
As you can see the list leans to (a) conventional non-cat and (b) soapstone. The soapstone stoves have been widely used for decades by the Old Amish I knew –figure that is a pretty good recommendation since they don’t fool about with frou-frou unreliable on essentials.
Now my reservations about the different stoves are this:
(1) Soapstone – great heat, solid workhorses BUT they sound as if they can be bloody touchy about how hot they are allowed to get. This one wants only a temperature of not more than XXX but that one will allow a temperature of a 100 degrees more…… and if they don’t like the heat, the stone breaks. That sounds a little problematic to me …. unless those temperatures are pretty much what a cast iron can take and you don’t have to keep taking the soapstone’s temperature.
(Note: I got really really spoiled by my Waterford wood stoves from back in the ‘90s (EPA and the first secondary burn stoves) that you couldn’t hurt with doing anything less than shoving plastic explosives in them and which burned anything you feed them and forgave all kinds of temperature fluctuations and just kept going and going and going….)
(2) Cast Iron – that 2 of the Hearthstone, the Jotul, the Lopi and the Vermont Castings. The Hearthstones, Jotul and Lopi are pretty much like everything I have always had. The Vermont Castings is that 2 in 1 and I’ll have that Cat out of there in a heartbeat. IF VC made one without the cat in that size, I would have that one on the list instead of 2 in 1. (From what I have read over the years, the VC cats have a seriously nasty habit of making you call for parts and see below on my reservations about cats in general) Interestingly VC is now doing all the stove body casting for Jotul and other…..
(3) Catalytics…… yes, I have read (endlessly) that they are not the disasters they were years ago. Yes, I have read the claims that they aren’t that hard to run so long as you
(a) Only give them certain wood and exactly what they want
(b) Hover over them on start up with small fires and fussing and getting them going
(c) Don’t let them burn too hot too fast
And on and on and on…… and then in addition over the years I keep seeing the threads on this forum titled “Help Did I Ruin My New Cat Stove By (fill in the blank.) Not consistent with my definition of ‘easy to operate.’
The only cat stove to make the list is the new Woodstock – the bigger one. They arranging for some of their local customers to talk to me and show me their Woodstocks. Love the idea of that stove if we go with soapstone – have reservations about the catalytic part.
Cont'd below in another post.