fishman
Veteran Member
Being I'm in Texas, my needs for burning wood differ from many, I'm sure. But I do have a question and hope to get some good feedback. First some background.
When I lived in Missouri, I always burned wood in a woodstove. Now I find myself in a home with a big fireplace with a blower insert. It can really crank out the heat, but it absolutely eats wood doing it. Also, there aren't many times when maximum output is desired. Many times we want a small fire with minimal heat output. We can't shut down the draft at all, and twice in the middle of the night we've had downdrafts reverse our drafting, pumping carbon monoxide into our living room, setting off our alarm. We also often have embers left over the following morning in the ash, which precludes us from shutting the draft, so we lose heat all day.
So I'm thinking about buying some glass doors for the front of my insert. What I'm hoping is that they will do several things. They will allow us to burn wood when it's a little warm to do so, preventing too much heat from being dumped in the room. /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif They'll allow us to shut the damper down a ways during the night to conserve coals, acting like a woodstove in other words, without smoking up the house. And lastly they'll prevent reverse drafting which is no good.
Can anyone tell me if this is reasonable? And if it's not, are there better fireplace inserts out there that act like a woodstove, provide good aesthetics, and don't cost more than a good used car? I'd prefer to use what I have if possible.
When I lived in Missouri, I always burned wood in a woodstove. Now I find myself in a home with a big fireplace with a blower insert. It can really crank out the heat, but it absolutely eats wood doing it. Also, there aren't many times when maximum output is desired. Many times we want a small fire with minimal heat output. We can't shut down the draft at all, and twice in the middle of the night we've had downdrafts reverse our drafting, pumping carbon monoxide into our living room, setting off our alarm. We also often have embers left over the following morning in the ash, which precludes us from shutting the draft, so we lose heat all day.
So I'm thinking about buying some glass doors for the front of my insert. What I'm hoping is that they will do several things. They will allow us to burn wood when it's a little warm to do so, preventing too much heat from being dumped in the room. /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif They'll allow us to shut the damper down a ways during the night to conserve coals, acting like a woodstove in other words, without smoking up the house. And lastly they'll prevent reverse drafting which is no good.
Can anyone tell me if this is reasonable? And if it's not, are there better fireplace inserts out there that act like a woodstove, provide good aesthetics, and don't cost more than a good used car? I'd prefer to use what I have if possible.