[AT] WAS: oil dry NOW: stoves

charlie hill charliehill at embarqmail.com
Tue Feb 24 11:39:10 PST 2015


Mine is more or less like the one in this picture except that the draft 
control
knobs are on the sides in the front corners at the bottom and the door 
doesn't
have a sight window.   The stove can be run with the door open for effect if
someone wants to watch the fire like a fireplace.  It's not fancy but it 
does a good
job. http://hearth.com/gall/v/WoodStoves/woodstove004.jpg.html
Some local guys here built probably a couple hundred of them during the 70's 
fuel
crisis.  They basically copied it from another brand of stove very similar 
to the one in
the link.

-----Original Message----- 
From: Gunnells, Bradley R
Sent: Tuesday, February 24, 2015 2:13 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: [AT] WAS: oil dry NOW: stoves

Yes the ash pan is wonderful! During the winter my stove will often be going 
24/7 for weeks on end. Being able to slide that pan out and empty it while 
burning is something I wouldn’t want to be without after having one. Mine 
unfortunately has to have the main door open to access it. I like how yours 
is setup Steve.

I got it about 15 years ago from a buddy when helping him move. It was given 
to him for his shop when the previous owner got it a little warm and warped 
some of the internals. I cleaned it up good and painted it. Replaced the 
damaged internals and have been very happy with it ever since.

Here’s the stove. I wish I had the warming racks like this one. Feels good 
to back up near after clearing snow.

http://vermontcastings.com/family/Stoves/Non-Catalytic/Resolute-Acclaim/

Brad

On Feb 24, 2015, at 12:53 PM, Stephen Offiler 
<soffiler at gmail.com<mailto:soffiler at gmail.com>> wrote:

I've got a Jotul F400 Castine.  It has a grate in the bottom of the firebox
that ash (and very small chunks of coals) fall down through.  Below that is
a tin pan that slides out to empty the ashes.  You can even do this with
the stove roaring full tilt, if you wear welding gloves. A terrific side
benefit is that you can also feed air to the fire up from underneath if you
crack that ash-pan door, kind of a turbo mode, often helpful to get a new
fire started.  I like this stove.

http://jotul.com/us/products/stoves/jotul-f-400-castine


SO


On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 1:25 PM, charlie hill <charliehill at embarqmail.com>
wrote:

I understand that Mike.   Actually I've been fortunate this year.
Fuel oil has been cheap enough that I haven't burned but one
small fire in my wood stove all year and I hope I don't have to
but I know what you mean about having to keep it hot.  I just don't
always clean mine completely out.   I guess that depends on the
brand and type of stove but I'm usually able to keep those coals pushed off
to the side so that I can clean just the totally burned ash out.
Of course that means letting the stove go completely cold for a couple of
hours and you probably don't have that luxury.

Charlie

-----Original Message-----
From: Mike
Sent: Tuesday, February 24, 2015 12:57 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] oil dry

Hi Charlie, I have an airtight stove as well, unfortunately it's been so
cold here in Michigan, that I don't have the luxury of letting my stove
burn down to the ash like you described. I need to keep in cleaned out
every few days, so I can keep it full of wood. I know I'm dumping out
BTU's but the coals don't throw enough heat when its this cold
especially when the wind kicks up. If my stove top isn't at least 400
degrees I start losing the battle. Jeez, I can't wait for Spring!

Mike M

On 2/24/2015 10:12 AM, charlie hill wrote:
Mike,  I use an air tight type wood stove and most of the time my ash
is fine, off white powder.  I try to leave the black coals in the fire
box
until they are no more.  But speaking of the coals, when I was in
high school and it snowed, the janitor would put down fine clinkers from
the coal boiler to make the sidewalks "safe".    However, you are right
about the wife factor.  Always have good door mats!

Charlie

-----Original Message-----
From: Mike
Sent: Monday, February 23, 2015 10:13 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] oil dry

That is until your wife notices all the black carbon being tracked
inside :-)

Mike M

On 2/23/2015 9:28 PM, charlie hill wrote:
When all else fails, wood ash out of the wood stove works pretty well.
It also works to help de-ice the door steps.

Charlie

-----Original Message-----
From: Carl Gogol
Sent: Monday, February 23, 2015 8:39 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] oil dry

Price the cheapest kitty liter at your local "big" grocery store.  Ours
(Wegman's) has a variety and over a wide price range.  the cheapest
version
has always worked well for inhaling oil.  Crush with your shies to get
the
last bit if you don't have time for it to work its way in.


-----Original Message-----
From: jtchall at nc.rr.com
Sent: Monday, February 23, 2015 8:19 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] oil dry

Dang that's cheap! Like I said earlier, the best a real parts store
could
do
on a pallet full was $9 a bag.
Whats a Rural King and how far east are they? Sounds something like
Tractor
supply, we just got a couple of those in the last 4-5 years. TSC ain't
cheap
but they do carry some stuff hard to find anywhere else.

John


-----Original Message-----
From: Indiana Robinson
Sent: Monday, February 23, 2015 7:34 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] oil dry

I just run to Rural King...
I just checked on-line and they show oil-dry as "in stock" at $4.99 for
a
50# bag.
I had to check because the last bag I bought was probably about 5 years
ago.
Not much shop time  :-(


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