SWNMELK
Member
We have a Quadra-Fire and love it. Was expensive but works great, heating 2400 sq/ft. will take a 24'' piece of wood. We live in SW NM so not as cold as Montana, our winter nights are mid teens, but think it would work good there too.
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dont worry about the brand of stove, as the aforementioned advise is what it is all about, not the brand of stoveTo keep sweet pea happy in the morning I run the stove very hot for half an hour, turn on the furnace which gets lots of warm air to the master bath. Hand her a cup of coffee and get the hell out of the way.
This is almost identical to what I do. 4000 sf house, stove in the basement. I burn only lodgepole and cedar. It will keep the entire house in the low 70’s and burn you out if it’s not real cold outside.I don't know a ton about woodstoves, but I do heat my house with one and have for the last 8 years. It is an Enviro Kodiak - made in Canada. It was cheaper than the BlazeKing model of similar size. It was also simpler, and seemed more stout and came highly recommended. I only burn lodgepole and heat a 3,600 sq foot house no problem. That said, my stove is in the basement, and so in the winter I try and keep the basement about 74 which in turn keeps the upstairs about 68.
There is only 1 brand to buy IMHO.
Quadrafire.
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You'll thank me later.
I use a valcourt Lafeyette zero clearance out of canada. Great unit, ducting runs upstairs through the attic to heat the kiddos rooms. works great.Tell me about woodstoves...I'm shopping around for a replacement stove with hopes of ordering something and having it installed before fall. My experience is with very large furnace style of woodstove with blowers. What I do know is the one in my house is currently too small for the square footage to heat it efficiently as primary heat and was designed as more of supplemental. The previous owner tried to heat solely from wood but admitted it was too small and had gotten it too hot before. I'm thinking I may have to do some reconfiguring of the flooring to account a slightly larger woodstove footprint but that likely isn't too big of a deal as long as I don't got too wild with sizing. My house is right around 1800 sqft with the woodstove located in the NW side of the house (not ideal but that what I'm working with)
Is Blaze King still the gold standard of woodstove or is there a better option? If there is a better option please explain. What should I keep an eye out for while researching?
I'm open to just about any thoughts as I'm not real thrilled about the $3k price tag associated with a BlazeKing but there is currently a 26% tax credit on "EPA efficient" woodstoves (including cost of installation) so that will likely come into consideration for long term costs.