water stoves
But to the OP's point if you don't have a need why then heat thousands of gallons of water....
You are going to have heat loss regardless.
I can see if you're heating a shop.... Just having a hard time seeing the efficiency in heating
massive volumes of water when all a guy might need is a 200 gal capacity
Thermal mass is thermal mass, The more thermal mass like water or firebrick
the warmer the thermal mass and the less fuel burned.
The russian and finnish fireplaces prove my point.
The thing is you can have a very small wild fire emmiting almost zero smoke
because the fire box being half filled with fire brick is absorbing and radiating
heat and keeping the fire hot and burning any smoke particles that would escape
through the chimney.
The water load is yet another thermal mass that is radiating heat into the home or
work shop and returning with the cooler water that is going to be reheated.
If you have a fire box of a certain size that is half filled with fire brick and you are
burning a hot fire you are consuming the same amount of fuel for a large reservoir/heat
mass as you are a small one so the economics are built in there for a bigger thermal mass to begin with.
The more water the better for heating and as I mentioned previously the properly
insulated water jacket and pex tubing using the $13.00 per foot tubing which loses
one per cent per hundred feet allows that much more heat to enter the structure.
Your heating lets say 4,000 gallons with a small wild fire in the firebox which has fire brick
as half its volume ans well as firebricked sides to hold heat that radiates into the water
chamber that is above or behind the firebox like a locomotive where heat is rising and
being fed oxygen in the combustion air intake as well as using a small induced draft fan
to aid in pulling/the heat energy through the tube heat exchangers.
After a while your water is up to temperature and then the fire box can be filled with a load of
coal or wood to maintain the thermal energy that is stored in the boilers water jacket with
much less effort as the fire brick is storing and radiating heat continually and if the fire goes
out the 4,000 gallons in storage can last a day or two or three if you let the fire go out.
If you installed a bottom feed coal stoker retort to make heat in this boiler it is the same
method used in the more modern steam locolotives and rotary snow blowers used in rail service
in the lat 19th and begining of the 20th century the bottom feed coal stokers with the combustion
air blown through the coal delivery tube are still available as i understand it and I may simply decide
to do it this way with my old boiler if I still have it or I may modify a Harman wood and coal boiler
with one and have a sheet metal ash bin made for it.
if you all collectively put more firebrick in the water stoves you use you would burn less wood and make
less smoke for sure.