Thursday, October 9, 2014

Things To Look At When Buying Economical Woodstoves

By Bradd Alan


Buying a woodstove has never been this trickier. Unless you have the information about woodstoves on your finger tips you may not get it all right. When you decide to buy a woodstove you will have two main sources of information to rely on. First is the dealer and secondly it is the manufacturers manual. Some dealers can be unreliable so you need to be careful by following the following tips.

Take a closer look at the material the stove is made of. If it is cast iron or another metal of same caliber, that will simply mean that the artistic carves look better for that particular stove. Cast iron is expensive though. For a cheaper bargain, you can go for the welded steel iron, which is equally good but less attractive given that it looks too dull.

Will you go for a catalytic or non-catalytic stove? Well, that is very much debatable. Most both the catalytic and non-catalytic stove users will tell you they are both good. Catalytic stoves produce long steady heat out put while the non-catalytic produce a steeper heat output curve. One important aspect is that they both burn up to the same efficiency. It will be correct to say that a non-catalytic is much economical given that you will not have to replace the catalyst in future.

If you want to buy a wood stove, you will need to look at the emission aspects. A stove that gives too much emission will mean too much waste on fuel as it will burn a lot of wood per hour. A catalytic wooden stove is said to be good in reducing smoke emission than the non-catalytic one.

How long your wood stove can burn is also an important thing to look at. You need to go for a medium stove if you want a stove that will burn the longest. However, that might depend on the type of wood also. Small stoves tend to burn out faster than their larger counterparts which also tend to consume more fuel hence uneconomical.

A too old stove can be good or bad depending on its status. While a new stove will be more fuel efficient, an old stove might have gaps for leakages that you should repair to save on fuel wastage. That will save you the cost of replenishing your stock of fuel.

You need to check the heat output of the wood stove you want to purchase. The heat output of your stove should be such that it produces a higher peak heat out put per hour. Note that too much heat output can damage the stoves innards.

Size is one major aspect you need to consider as well. A small stove is appropriate for heating a single room or a cabin. A large wood stove is most ideal for large house or open plan designs. A medium wood stove on the other hand will be appropriate for medium sized houses.




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