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Wood Burning Stove


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Look on the stove sites stig,,, there's normally a bit where you put in your room dimensions ,,width length,and hight, and it calculates what kilowatt output you need..

have an immersion heater fitted to your hot water tank

got this in my allotment shed it gets very warm

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If the liner is going up an existing chimney I can't see it being an issue? It wont be in contact with anything flammable.

 

chimneys in had a coal fire in it till a few year ago ...

 

 

You should still consider a liner though mate. I know opinion differs but the basic argument behind the liner is that because burners work at about 80% efficiency whereas open fires wonly work at about 20% efficiency, a open fire has 80% of it's heat going up the chimney which takes the smoke out very efficently, the burner only has 20% of it's heat going up the chimney so the smoke can condense in such a big space causing bad tar build up in the chimney that can literally run down the inside of the chimney after build up. By fitting a liner it reduces the inner volume stopping the smoke condensing.

 

Plus alot of folk burn all sorts of shit pallets and wet wood which constricts the flue with soot tar over time

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Would an insert stove not do you

??? pass
They just fit in the original fire opening , mate fitted one without having to do anything other than slide it in

 

 

 

An insert or inset is one that goes fits snug inside the hearth, designed to chuck the heat out through the glass. ie you dont really see the sides top.

:hmm: might do the job ..

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Look at the french enameld burners if you want something that looks really nice stig or go scandinavian like Jotal if you want to be really snuggly warm.

saw one go through the auction few week ago nice looking thing two-tone enamel loads of detail on it ....

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Getting woodburner and rad system putting in the new house, bloke fitting it recommends Charnwood, cant get to a place that sells them for a couple of weeks. They look good though. How much wood do you get through each winter? & does it do your hot water? If so how do you heat water come summer?

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Getting woodburner and rad system putting in the new house, bloke fitting it recommends Charnwood, cant get to a place that sells them for a couple of weeks. They look good though. How much wood do you get through each winter? & does it do your hot water? If so how do you heat water come summer?

have an immersion heater fitted to your hot water tank

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Make sure when you buy the woodburner you get a thermal efficient one , the cheap ones don't seal properly & burn a stack of wood , a decent stove ie ,clearview , jotal , morsqe,wlll set you back a grand +flue +fitting .2.5~3k will be my guess .Don't buy a cheap one it will cost you dear !!

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I have just fitted mine myself into my static, I was recommended a 3kw but I bought a 6.5 as I thought I'd rather it be too big than too small. I also wanted it big enough to be able to chuck a decent sized log on.

 

It was piss easy to install myself however its only a 2m flue and cost me around £600 all in. That was seriously shopping around as I was on a budget.

 

Best thing ive bought for a while though :). Its blowing a gale outside and its 1degree but I'm sat by the fire warm as toast :).

 

Its definitely worth doing if you can and yer they might cost a bit to set up but then think there is plenty of free wood about so you will have a minimal heating bill

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Fitted plenty of these and seen plenty DIY disasters above 5k the room needs venting, i would always fit a flue liner as tar and creosote can run down the back of the flue and make a right mess, common fault is people often fit the liner upside down which causes the residue to run down the outside of the liner, always fit a nose cone and rope to the liner when installing will save you no end of grief, fitting register or closure plate can sometimes be tricky. but not beyond the ability of the average DIYer. Anyway good luck with it.

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