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Installing A Wood Burning Stove

It is possible to save a great deal of money on utility bills by simply installing a wood stove. Not only that, but wood burning is known to be more...

 

It is possible to save a great deal of money on utility bills by simply installing a wood stove. Not only that, but wood burning is known to be more environmentally friendly than burning fossil fuels. Traditional oil, gas and coal cannot be replaced once burned but tree can be endlessly replaced by planting new ones. So let’s look at how to actually install one of these beasts.

First understand that installing a wood burner is akin to putting in an above ground furnace, so always check with your insurance company before you commence anything. Most of insurers will require the burner to be professionally installed since there is a certain amount of precision required and a single mistake can easily cause a fire to break out in your house or apartment.

The next step is to calculate the size of wood burner you should install. This is part science and part experience and you would be best advised to speak to a professional. Ask them to pay you a visit so they can see what your requirements are and what the situation is so they can help you choose the right burner.

While it is natural to focus on the wood stove it is in fact equally important to consider the flue, since flues fitted to wood stoves must be lined with material suitable for wood burning. If you are fortunate enough to have a conveniently located chimney you might be able to simply line this with the right sort of material, otherwise you will be looking at additionally installing a new flue.

After your wood burner has been professionally installed, your next step is to clear any and all combustible materials away from the vicinity of the stove. The owner’s manual will specify the recommended clearance for keeping flammable materials from the stove. If you have children, make sure they understand that what is being installed is potentially very dangerous and not a toy.

After you start to actually use your wood stove you will need to schedule cleaning and maintenance. This is not dissimilar to the process for cleaning a regular chimney. The reasons you need to remove creosote and other deposits from the stove and flue are twofold. One, an accumulation of creosote will eventually rot the flue pipe and impair the burner. Two, when not in use during the summer, the creosote will start to smell quite unpleasantly.

To ensure long and trouble free use of you wood burner you should arrange a full sweep and clean at the least every year. By all means also make use of proprietary cleaning products called chimney cleaning logs that don’t do everything the makers claim for them but which can help control deposits to some extent.

To sum up then, bringing in professional help from the beginning will give you wood burning stove installation the best chance of success. This is a long term investment that should pay for itself many times over in the years ahead as well making a small contribution towards reducing the impact on the environment.

Check out these additional articles to find out much more about types of wood stove and how to install a wood stove.

Wood Burning Stoves – The Heating Technology Of The Future?

 

While the wood burning stove doesn’t sound even remotely futuristic, there are in fact a variety of simple yet compelling reasons why this apparent relic of the past is poised to re-emerge as an important heating technology in the years ahead.

The original wood burning stove was born of necessity about two hundred and fifty years ago when the rapid expansion of Philadelphia led to a chronic shortage of firewood. Among the residents happened to be the famous inventor Benjamin Franklin, who developed the circulating stove to alleviate this issue.

This new stove was orders of magnitude more efficient than a conventional open fire, which meant quite simply that a reduced amount of wood was needed which in turn substantially eased the excess demand for this finite resource. The first design was soon improved with a front door, to seal and even better control the airflow, and it remained fundamentally unchanged for the succeeding two hundred or so years.

By the time the 1970s rolled around, a familiar story resurfaced; the oil crises of that period of time limited the supply of oil which in turn impacted the many people who by this time counted on gas and oil to operate their heating systems. Many quite sensibly began to reconsider wood burners given the easily accessible and thus more affordable supply of fuel.

It could all have gone horribly wrong at this point as two hundred year old heating technology confronted modern fuel efficiency and pollution laws. But instead there were soon wood burners that boasted heat resistant linings, automation, and catalytic converters even. This new breed was a serious match for even the most up-to-date oil and gas boilers.

The wood stove continued comfortably along in this new upgraded form, but remained a decidedly minor player in the heating technology world. That was until oil depletion and climate change started creeping up the global agenda. Without doubt the escalating price of oil at first drove this new resurgence in the popularity of the humble wood burner, but concern about carbon footprints was also becoming a factor.

Burning wood is in fact not only cheap, it’s also a more or less carbon neutral and completely renewable form of energy. So long as the sun continues to shine, trees will take in carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and split it into carbon in the form of wood and oxygen which is released back into the air.

All that is necessary to clean up the CO2 discharged by burning the wood from a tree is to grow another tree. It really is as straightforward as that and for that reason, although it will probably never become a dominant heating technology, woodburning is likely to be with us for quite some time yet. Think of it as a kind of solar energy that helps clear CO2 from the atmosphere while the fuel grows.

For much more information on this subject, check out http://www.kulekat.com/woodburners/ and http://www.kulekat.com/woodburners/installingwoodburningstoves.html.