Hey all! I’m new here, first time posting. My husband and I (me really) could use some guidance on a new fireplace/wood burining stove set up. I have read several post, but there’s so much info here I really don't know where to anchor in. We're military and have been moving a LOT, but we bought a home YAY! (2100 sq’) and will soon be ready to do up the fireplace. Three years in Alaska and three in Ohio sitting in front of a nice toasty fireplace and out in the yard in front of a firepit has me addicted to fireplaces and pits. I’ve stayed in so many cabins with wood buring stoves that I do not think I could ever live without one, well I don’t want to.
The house has a fireplace insert, which originally was wood burning, but my husband had gas run to it and bought one of those gas log kits at Lowes ($250) and put in mainly for ambiance and slight warmth, and because at the time we rarely had time to get wood and use it. We were going overseas and wanted something easy to enjoy on back and forth trips (only made it home once), but we will be returning home in three months and we (I WANT IT ASAP!) want to begin my fireplace remodel, and I want a really good wood buring stove. Left to hubby, we’d just have a pit in the front yard, and, he’d likely pour mogas on it to light it!
The fireplace has a huge chase, you could literally stand 4-5 full grown men around inside the chase on the back side with atleast 10-12” of spacing on the sides. The flue runs straight up through the attic and the house is a single story with low gable end roof, so easy access. From inside the attic area I can look down into the chase and see everything, the stud walls, sheetrock, the straps and flue and the back sides of the brick facade walls. There is a brick hearth with brick walls on the front and back, the front being the den and back the living room, and the fireplace sits up about 12” off the main floor on a solid cement foundation. The insert is all metal, no fire bricks, suxs. There’s a lot of waisted space for this thing and I want to redo the entire thing, maybe even taking down the wall that seperates the den from the LR (with fireplace in the middle) and having a free standing stove that can be enjoyed from all around, like an open concept deal; this is exciting!
I’m not sure what questions to ask, except the obvious, 1) should I do a freestanding stove, or should I leave the chase and install the stove inside, what would work best? My husband can (and he will if tell him to) take down the wall. He can remove the insert, and he can clean up his mess.
What's the best stove, for freestanding use, for insert use?
Is there a double side stove, and if so who makes the best one? It would really be cool to have double fronts, so I can use and see it from both LR and den, should we leave the chase. Hm? Can we do like a half chase, leaving like a box like look with the flue running up and out and into the ceiling?
What’s a soap box stove? IDK? I just saw one on Pinterest and it said these are the best. Are they? They look huge and expensive.
I’m certain there’s a lot I’m not considering or even thinking about that I need to first, but I’m not sure what this would be. So, I’ll wait to hear back from anyone that can guide me in/us in this development process. We’re stuck here in Japan for the next three more months due to this CCP-crap, so this is a good time for me to start getting things lined up for my fireplace redo. Well, our redo.
Thanks all!
Look forward to gettin it built!
Zephyr
The house has a fireplace insert, which originally was wood burning, but my husband had gas run to it and bought one of those gas log kits at Lowes ($250) and put in mainly for ambiance and slight warmth, and because at the time we rarely had time to get wood and use it. We were going overseas and wanted something easy to enjoy on back and forth trips (only made it home once), but we will be returning home in three months and we (I WANT IT ASAP!) want to begin my fireplace remodel, and I want a really good wood buring stove. Left to hubby, we’d just have a pit in the front yard, and, he’d likely pour mogas on it to light it!
The fireplace has a huge chase, you could literally stand 4-5 full grown men around inside the chase on the back side with atleast 10-12” of spacing on the sides. The flue runs straight up through the attic and the house is a single story with low gable end roof, so easy access. From inside the attic area I can look down into the chase and see everything, the stud walls, sheetrock, the straps and flue and the back sides of the brick facade walls. There is a brick hearth with brick walls on the front and back, the front being the den and back the living room, and the fireplace sits up about 12” off the main floor on a solid cement foundation. The insert is all metal, no fire bricks, suxs. There’s a lot of waisted space for this thing and I want to redo the entire thing, maybe even taking down the wall that seperates the den from the LR (with fireplace in the middle) and having a free standing stove that can be enjoyed from all around, like an open concept deal; this is exciting!
I’m not sure what questions to ask, except the obvious, 1) should I do a freestanding stove, or should I leave the chase and install the stove inside, what would work best? My husband can (and he will if tell him to) take down the wall. He can remove the insert, and he can clean up his mess.
What's the best stove, for freestanding use, for insert use?
Is there a double side stove, and if so who makes the best one? It would really be cool to have double fronts, so I can use and see it from both LR and den, should we leave the chase. Hm? Can we do like a half chase, leaving like a box like look with the flue running up and out and into the ceiling?
What’s a soap box stove? IDK? I just saw one on Pinterest and it said these are the best. Are they? They look huge and expensive.
I’m certain there’s a lot I’m not considering or even thinking about that I need to first, but I’m not sure what this would be. So, I’ll wait to hear back from anyone that can guide me in/us in this development process. We’re stuck here in Japan for the next three more months due to this CCP-crap, so this is a good time for me to start getting things lined up for my fireplace redo. Well, our redo.
Thanks all!
Look forward to gettin it built!
Zephyr