5030
Rest in Peace
- Joined
- Feb 21, 2003
- Messages
- 28,967
- Location
- SE Michigan in the middle of nowhere
- Tractor
- Kubota M9000 HDCC3 M9000 HDC
At today's inflated prices, anything you heat with will be expensive...anything.
wood is good!Neighbor in damp and humid Olympia WA has a complete shop and the wood stove always fired and the shop is very dry but he is retired and in the shop 7 days each week.
He has all the wood he can use for the sawing and splitting.
He told me he couldn’t imagine not having wood and paying for electric in retirement.
North America’s abundant natural resource endorsed by President Carter with tax incentives…wood is good!
Yep… rotting in the forest or up in flames due to a wild fire or keeping the hearth warm on a cold winters night…And OH SO Carbon neutral!
@ponytug already alluded to this, but the condensation actually is "the direct fault of the heater". Each gallon of kerosene burned produces something like 1.3 gallons of water as a byproduct in its exhaust. Hard to believe, if you're not a chemist, but true. While folks heating their homes with kerosene space heaters in the 1970's probably loved this aspect, free humidification, all that added water is going to cause condensation the next time you let the temperature drop in that space.While the condensation was not the direct fault of the heater (it's more due to the difference in temps between outside and inside without proper insulation, vapor barriers, and airflow), it still was a problem.
Good choice. Just be aware of the cleaning requirements, and the various issues of different brands. hearth.com has a whole pellet stove forum, and reading through the issues guys seem to have with various models there, I'd be looking first at Harmon.My new idea and project to start soon is a pellet stove.
Length dictates static draw, diameter dictates flow. Generally, taller is more of a problem with over-drafting on modern low-flow stoves, as these stoves are typically designed for worst-case min draft. When dealing with wood stoves, those of us with taller chimneys actually have to restrict them down to behave more like a shorter chimney, rather than step up.Pricing stove pipe, the cheapest I have found so far is $350! And that is just the pipe, no other parts like elbows or the cap, etc. This is the DuraVent 4in x 36in chimney stove pipe at $35. (30/3x$35=$350). I'm not even sure if this is the right size pipe! Do I need to step up in size to run that length?
Not since at least the 1990's. This advice comes from older (think 1970's) wood stoves, that threw damn near half their heat up the chimney, and there were cases where you could take heat off the pipe without too much penalty. There were even special heat-exchanger stove pipes designed for this purpose. In many cases where too much heat was removed, they caused massive creosote deposition problems, and eventual chimney fires.It's actually better to have single wall pipe in the inside of the occupied space since you get more heat that way.
Keep in mind that Harmon is by far the most expensive solid fuel burning units on the market today and far as I know, none of them are corn biomass capable.I'd be looking first at Harmon.
All the outlets for wood pellets around here store the pallets of pellets (ha ha) outdoors, un-covered.Additionally... Biomass (pellet and corn burning appliances) don't produce creosote if vented and operating properly.
All they produce is fine fly ash, no creosote what so ever and why they mist be maintained religiously and often as the fly ash will plug them up. When I'm using mine, they get cleaned internally at least weekly and I take apart the external venting and clean it inside a couple times during the heating season plus my external venting has a removable fly ash trap at the bottom of the vertical outside pipe run that gets dumped weekly and of course all of that is extremely messy.
Like I said previously, with the cost of manufactured pellets today, they are almost cost prohibitive to operate unless you can buy pellets in truckload quantities which I have in the past. truckload quantity is usually 22 skids of pellets delivered on a tractor trailer and the skids average 2000 pounds each so you need the proper equipment to unload them as well plus they have to be stored inside as if they sit outside, they attract moisture and damp pellets turn to mush in the bags which are usually 40 pounds per poly bag. Once they get soggy with moisture, they are not useable as a biomass stove needs it's fuel at or below 7% RM to combust.
If corn biomass is important to you, then by all means... but I came to the conclusion that Harmon is one to consider from spending way more time and years at hearth.com than I've ever spent here, and hearing what the pellet burners there say.Keep in mind that Harmon is by far the most expensive solid fuel burning units on the market today and far as I know, none of them are corn biomass capable.
Pretty and functional are not necessarily intertwined. Maybe they're pretty, maybe they're not... and maybe beauty is in the eye of the beholder. That's all irrelevant.In my opinion, Harmon's are pretty units but I'm not into pretty, I'm into functional and all of them basically do the same thing and that is rapid oxidation of a solid fuel source and produce heat and all of them must be at least 80% efficient or again they cannot be sold domestically.
I agree that no to low creosote production has something to do with operation and venting. Creosote is a result of incomplete combustion, aka smoke, and water. Pellet stoves do better than older wood stoves, but deposits can be a problem both from particular stoves designs and operation, and from the quality of the input pellets, e.g. water content and the particular properties of the biomass in the pellet. e.g. corn vs sawdust vs bark vs fiber.Additionally... Biomass (pellet and corn burning appliances) don't produce creosote if vented and operating properly.
All they produce is fine fly ash, no creosote what so ever and why they mist be maintained religiously and often as the fly ash will plug them up. When I'm using mine, they get cleaned internally at least weekly and I take apart the external venting and clean it inside a couple times during the heating season plus my external venting has a removable fly ash trap at the bottom of the vertical outside pipe run that gets dumped weekly and of course all of that is extremely messy.
Like I said previously, with the cost of manufactured pellets today, they are almost cost prohibitive to operate unless you can buy pellets in truckload quantities which I have in the past. truckload quantity is usually 22 skids of pellets delivered on a tractor trailer and the skids average 2000 pounds each so you need the proper equipment to unload them as well plus they have to be stored inside as if they sit outside, they attract moisture and damp pellets turn to mush in the bags which are usually 40 pounds per poly bag. Once they get soggy with moisture, they are not useable as a biomass stove needs its fuel at or below 7% RM to combust.
If I had Natural gas available, burning kerosene or wood pellets would not even enter considerations.There is much that I have learned from this thread and from my own research. For example, it never dawned on me that burring a kerosene or diesel heater would be the cause of so much condensation. After doing some pondering and discussing the issue with SWMBO, we have decided to go in an entirely different direction.
This year, since I wont actually be home much, I will use the kerosene heater when I need to work out there. The things that I'm afraid will be damaged due to the cold, we will move into one of the room with electric heat.
Once we have the funds saved up (I hate credit) we will purchase a large natural gas shop heater. I am hoping to install this by this time next year. At $1800, it is not something I can run out and purchase right now. Once we get the heater, we will plumb in the natural gas line. My house is pretty close to the shop where the gas line enters the house. It's about 30ft. That will be another expense as I have limited experience with installing gas lines and do not have the tooling to do it. I can however, dig the trench.
Once the natural gas heater is up and running, we will then shift our focus to insulation. Right now, the shop has a little insulation, if you can call it that. Its that thin layer of foam and plastic between the wood supports and the sheet metal. The roof also has this, but its all so thin and barely does anything. Pricing out insulation these days is mind boggling expensive! So, this will be done in sections when I can afford it, until the job is done.
We think that doing it this way, spending the money on something that we don't have to fuel, clean, worry about, etc is the way to go. It's expensive, but offers peace of mind.
I thank you all for the advise. You honestly saved me from doing something I'd later regret. This forum is amazing! I've learned so much here. Thank you all again!!