Thursday, November 27, 2014

How To Buy Economical Wood Stoves

By Bradd Alan


Dealers information and the manufacturers instruction manual is not enough when considering a purchase of a wood stove. You need a third eye into it as some dealers and manufactures can get very crappy with the information you need. You need to have the correct facts at the back of your mind to guide you through the purchase. Below are some of the few things you need to check as you go to purchase woodstoves.

Take a closer look at the material the stove is made of. If it is cast iron or another metal of same caliber, that will simply mean that the artistic carves look better for that particular stove. Cast iron is expensive though. For a cheaper bargain, you can go for the welded steel iron, which is equally good but less attractive given that it looks too dull.

Many wood stove users will debate about whether to settle for a catalytic and a non-catalytic stove. The truth is that both are fairly good. Catalytic wood stoves emit a steady heat output while the non-catalytic emit a peaky heat emission curve. Despite these physical differences, they both burn with almost the same heat efficiency. A non-catalytic woodstove will be more economical since you will not need to replace the catalyst when it is exhausted unlike the catalytic one.

If you want to buy a wood stove, you will need to look at the emission aspects. A stove that gives too much emission will mean too much waste on fuel as it will burn a lot of wood per hour. A catalytic wooden stove is said to be good in reducing smoke emission than the non-catalytic one.

To achieve an overnight burn time, the stoves total burn time is very important. Medium wood stoves are good in burning overnight. A stove that is too large will mean that it will use up more fuel and that can be expensive. A smaller stove on the other end will mean a shorter burn time. Consider these aspects when deciding on the type of stove to buy.

New stoves are more efficient than older ones. An old stove could be having leakage. You have to consider buying another or making some repairs. That will save you the excess costs of buying firewood, cutting and stacking in case you cut your own wood.

The heat output of your stove will be another factor to look at also. Your stove should give high heat outputs per given time. Too high heat output has one disadvantage; it can destroy the innards of your stove so watch that too.

Size is one major aspect you need to consider as well. A small stove is appropriate for heating a single room or a cabin. A large wood stove is most ideal for large house or open plan designs. A medium wood stove on the other hand will be appropriate for medium sized houses.




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