[AT] Pellet stove
deanvp at att.net
deanvp at att.net
Sun Nov 20 09:15:13 PST 2005
Farmer:
Looks like you have a good plan. We have used a wood pellet stove for several years and have been quite pleased with it. Our alternative heat is a Lennox heat pump which we are not too happy with. The Pellet Stove heats the house quite nicely for about 1/3 the cost. Had a bit of a pleasant surprise this fall when purchasing the first ton of pellets. They were on sale at $120 a ton. Usually around $150.00. Ours is a Whitfield stove, which are made locally but the company is now owned by Lennox. As I recall our pellet stoves are significantly more expensive out here in NW Washington than the $1200 you paid. Not sure why there is such a difference. Good luck with the installation.
-------------- Original message from "Indiana Robinson" <robinson at svs.net>: --------------
> I bought a new pellet stove last week. I didn't need it
> just yet but sales have been so brisk that I was afraid
> that when I needed it (next month) that I might not have
> much to pick from. I will install the new one in the house
> and put the one we have used for the last two years in the
> shop.
> I am going to install the new one at one end of the family
> room (24'x36'+) and put the last wood stove back in the
> stove nook. It is one of the cabinet type wood stoves with
> a thermostat and a blower on it.
> I will also keep the big wood stove in the shop. It is
> big enough to call a furnace and has a large squirrel cage
> blower on it which blows a lot of air out and down from
> each side of it.
> The plan in both cases is to keep the wood stoves going
> while we are available all day long but then to let the
> pellet stoves take over when we are gone or at night. That
> way neither place will have an opportunity to cool down and
> have to be heated back up. Most days the pellet stoves will
> be shut down after the wood stoves are fired up. The wood
> fires will be banked down over night. The wood stoves
> should keep the pellet cost down well and I have the wood.
> Then in extreme cold weather using both should eliminate
> the need for the electric heat to kick on in the upper
> level of the house. The new pellet stove is also about
> 1/3rd higher BTU rated than the old one.
> I was going to buy a corn stove but those are all gone and
> on waiting list here. Its not too big a deal as I have
> burned a pellet / corn blend successfully in the stove I
> had. At the moment I do not plan to grow any corn next year
> anyway.
> The new stove is a Breckwell like the ones at the bottom
> of this page:
> http://www.breckwell.com/pellet.htm
> Mine is the "Big E" furnace but with the large glass door.
> One of the things I did not care for on the old one was
> that the hopper barely held 40 # of pellets. This one holds
> 140#. Also at low fire the old one would use at least 3 to
> 4 pounds of pellets an hour which in 40 degree weather will
> drive you out of the house and wastes a lot of fuel. The
> new stove claims to burn as little as .9 pounds an hour on
> the lowest setting.
> There is a "secret" set of buttons on the old stove to
> adjust the low feed rate but that manufacture calls then
> "factory set" and does not tell how to set them. I intend
> to get a free video that they now have that supposedly
> tells how to set them. I don't want that high of a feed
> rate in the shop. I am not sure why they were so secretive
> about those settings in the past.
> The new stove will be connected to a millivolt thermostat
> mounted at a remote location in the room which should also
> save some fuel. Sometimes the day starts cold but warms a
> lot before we get home.
> The old pellet stove was $800 and the new one was $1200.
> The shop still needs a bit of "closing in" but I am
> gaining ground on it and it will be fairly tight a a couple
> of weeks. I'm really looking forward to working in a warm
> shop all winter. It is hard to get excited about working in
> there at 20 degrees... :-) I feel pretty comfortable
> working at 50 to 55 degrees.
>
>
> --
> "farmer"
> Living at Hewick Midwest
>
> Sometimes we have to work at it a little but if we
> are all going to age well we must indeed work at keeping a
> positive attitude. We might as well go out in overdrive and
> with the pedal to the metal because this thing called life
> "don't got no reverse"... There is no sense wasting
> a lot of time trying to find one...
> (FJR 2005)
>
> Francis Robinson
> Central Indiana USA
> robinson at svs.net
> _______________________________________________
> AT mailing list
> Remembering Our Friend Cecil Monson 11-4-2005
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
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