Point given to the indoor woodstove guys

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I ain't giving up my OWB either. I load morning and evenings, and around here it's been bouncing from -15 to around zero the last week or two, and now finally above zero during the day but still below zero at night for a few more days according to the forecast. But my fingers ain't cold - here's my glove story: was at deer camp in the yoop in November and stopped in at the local saw dealer for a muffler for the 51 and saw a brand of gloves that was new to me, Kinco brand, they had insulated and non insulated versions; I bought a pair of insulated ones upon recommendation of one of my hunting buddies as he's tried them before and really likes them for cold weather (to us, that's around zero or less). My main issue with gloves is they don't last long enough, and although it's only been a couple of months, I'm impressed so far. We'll see if they can make 6 months.
Best of both worlds
 
I usually wear...

Top-
T shirt
Hoodie Sweatshirt
Another hoodie sweatshirt
Carharht coat

Bottom-
Long johns
Jean's
Carharht bibs

Baffin -60* steel toe boots
Bonnet hat (whatever you English call it)
Canvas insulated mittens.
Face mask

I've tried some of the "designer" cold weather gear (like Klim). It's fine, but very expensive and it's not designed to be used around fuel, grease, abrasions, etc so it doesn't last.
Bonnet? We call it a touque, but to each his own. I call what you wear smart layering and I do the same.
 
I was thinking about a OWB but after reading a lot of post and other stuff on the wood useage I settled for my inside burner, England 28 3500. store two weeks worth of wood during noramal temp days.

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Run the tractor right to the door out side even.

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and load the furnace in my BVD's and bare feet.

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I have a friend in the UP with a OWB, Ideal set up but I think he had close to $10,000 in the set up. He built a pole barn and attched it to his house with a hall way. his wood burner is in there and two years worth of wood, his tractors and truck also reside in there. It is always warm and dry when he goes out to fill the wood burner.

He still insists party dry wood burns better in his burner too.

:D. Al
 
I wouldn't give up my OWB. Granted I do still run my open fireplace to get the "fire" effect seems to make the wife a little frisky!! Each to their own but Del from Georgia I don't think that stove would heat my 3800sq ft house in sub zero weather...but it is beautiful...and in Georgia an OWB I would imagine would be extreme overkill. Each of us have different needs and reasons of why/how we heat. Nice to see how many still utilize wood as a fuel.
I'm also a fan of Kinco gloves...seem to last as long as any others and pretty decent insulation in the cold, at a very reasonable price.
 
Bonnet? We call it a touque, but to each his own. I call what you wear smart layering and I do the same.

We call it a bonnet in northern Maine. Dunno.

When I joined the USAF it took me a few years to learn all the "english". Now when I go visit I get "you talk funny"
 
I'm not buying this I like the cold weather bravado that many clam to have. If you like the cold so much, why are you producing so much wood to stay warm?
Why do you dress in layers till you can't move to stay warm?
Lets face it, cold weather sucks. It makes your hands and feet hurt, your nose constantly runs, at least till your snot freezes. You constantly have to take layers on and off, depending on activity level. It slows down work activity and production. You gotta winterize everything. And worst of all, the babes don't wear bikinis when it too cold.:havingarest:
 
not as cold here in TN as it is up north, although it did get down in the single digits here a couple of nights last week. My indoor Englander wood stove has served me well for 37 seasons. I guess it has paid for itself. I hooked the water up to it several years ago. We keep it pretty hot in the house. I move wood in a weeks worth at a time with a pallet jack, park it in the garage, and get it out through a pass thru door in the den right by the stove. Keeps the mess to a minimum. 3.5 to 4 cords will heat the house all winter. Not knocking them, but how mush wood does the average OWB use in a winter?
 
not as cold here in TN as it is up north, although it did get down in the single digits here a couple of nights last week.

3.5 to 4 cords will heat the house all winter. Not knocking them, but how mush wood does the average OWB use in a winter?
I plan on 9 cords - some years it's more, some it's less. That includes a good amount of pine, cedar, willow, and punky wood that many wood snobs would turn their noses up at. I would dare say i could heat my house on 4 cord in the OWB if it was in Tennessee.
 
I plan on 9 cords - some years it's more, some it's less. That includes a good amount of pine, cedar, willow, and punky wood that many wood snobs would turn their noses up at. I would dare say i could heat my house on 4 cord in the OWB if it was in Tennessee.


Yes, you can burn some rough looking wood that I wouldn't want to bring into the house.
My daughter and son in law have a OWB in VA. There is a lot less work in processing a cord for him than there is for me. If he can pick it up and get it thru the door, it is small enough to burn. I like um a little smaller. There are advantages on both sides.
 
I plan on 9 cords - some years it's more, some it's less. That includes a good amount of pine, cedar, willow, and punky wood that many wood snobs would turn their noses up at. I would dare say i could heat my house on 4 cord in the OWB if it was in Tennessee.
I dont cull nothing. If it burns, it goes in the stack. Currently burning a mix of white oak, maple, sour wood, dogwood, bradford pair, white pine, yellow pine, popular, birch and even some left over building material. I pile the rounds in a pile, split and stack as I come to it, no sorting of preferred woods. I do sort by size when I put it in the basement. One rack gets the slivers and splinters, and the other rack get the large splits. I also mix and match when I put it in the stove, biggest pieces I can fit and then fill in the gaps with the smaller junk. It all burns and puts out heat.
 
I ain't giving up my OWB either. I load morning and evenings, and around here it's been bouncing from -15 to around zero the last week or two, and now finally above zero during the day but still below zero at night for a few more days according to the forecast. But my fingers ain't cold - here's my glove story: was at deer camp in the yoop in November and stopped in at the local saw dealer for a muffler for the 51 and saw a brand of gloves that was new to me, Kinco brand, they had insulated and non insulated versions; I bought a pair of insulated ones upon recommendation of one of my hunting buddies as he's tried them before and really likes them for cold weather (to us, that's around zero or less). My main issue with gloves is they don't last long enough, and although it's only been a couple of months, I'm impressed so far. We'll see if they can make 6 months.


Kinco has been around a long time.A good durable glove or mitten.If you buy their mitten,or any leather mitten for that matter,get them big enough to put in an insert.
 
Last time I looked, Alaska, Michigan and Minnesota were WAY farther north from where I live here in Southern Ontario.
Oh ya......and Trump's an idiot and a pervert

If Trump is all that ,what's that make Trudeau?I mean aside from being a liberal!
 
I plan on 10 cord a year for my OWB...I'm heating 3800 sq. ft. along with DHW. I sure appreciate not having to haul into the house. A perfect wood burning scenario doesn't exist, for myself the OWB is about as close as I can get for my situation.
 
Could never heat what I heat with one indoor stove unless it was a water boiler and the associated piping and costs. Too much square footage, 2 separate houses and domestic hot water. Put 6 sticks in the owb this morning along with a bunch more christmas paper and cardboard. Will likely put some in before dark tonight, takes a couple of minutes to do. I might even stack it half full and not bother loading it tomorrow. -12 C ( 10 F) right now and - 19 C (-2 F) tonight expected. I spend more time putting wood in the furnace in the shop than I do the OWB.
 
OK, so i concede that my fingers got COLD loading the OWB just now. Actually threw a few splits in at 5:30 and wasn't too bad, but filled it at 9:00 at -8° and had to come inside for a warm up. At that moment I was jealous of the woodstove owners.

So here I am, admitting that I'm contemplating the ultimate switch. Get ready for it...



It's time to get out the winter gloves! I love the rubber coated gloves I usually use if there is rain or wet snow, but they are not very thick. Snow at this temperature doesn't make for wet gloves very quickly so insulation is more important. Ain't NO way I'm giving up my OWB if you thought that's where I was going! :laugh:
 
Im not up on this outside wood burner.why in the hell would u want one a stove give u all of the btu's you would loose all of the radiant heat from a free standing stove if it were outside .that makes as much since as a donald trump ******** story.am i missing something .im alittle slow but i get there.
 
Im not up on this outside wood burner.why in the hell would u want one a stove give u all of the btu's you would loose all of the radiant heat from a free standing stove if it were outside .that makes as much since as a donald trump ******** story.am i missing something .im alittle slow but i get there.
Hey scooter - you may want to read up a little on OWB's before joining a site and criticizing a bunch of people. It may not suit *your* situation in California, but is the best alternative for *my* situation. As I've said many times, it is not for everyone.
 

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