What does it cost???

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Locoweed

Locoweed

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Trying to heat with a fireplace using purchased firewood isn't a good deal except in a emergency.

Find some numbers on using a wood stove and cutting your own firewood.

Even deducting the cost of the stove and the equipment to cut and haul wood, it is a great deal.
 
elektrobot

elektrobot

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Total Bs

That article is complete crap. First off, who burns 21 pounds of seasoned wood per hour. Dry wood is much lighter than wet wood, and I'd be lucky to fit 21 pounds of it in my Napoleon insert at once, let alone do it each hour. Last November, we had our wood burning insert installed, and I did not have any firewood prepared, so we bought it. Purchased 3 cords @ $140.00 a cord. Had an average of $40.00 gas bill each month, but thats because prices were way up. The actual therm usage was less than 1/10 of previous years. Even after having to purchase our wood last year, we came out WAY ahead. This year even more so after having all last winter and this early spring to get plenty of wood ready.

If you are thinking of installing a wood burner to heat your house, this article is not accurate, and anyone who heats with wood can tell you this first hand. Nothing beats the cost savings and comfort value of heating with wood.

.... hope all that ranting was worth .02 cents.
 
hockeypuck

hockeypuck

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cost of wood

I noticed that they were talking about cities. Fire wood in the cities (say boston) costs about 50 to 60 percent more than an hour north or west of the city. This with all the factors mentioned above make that a skewed argument at best. That article was probably produced by some tree huggin group.

Puck
 
laynes69

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I was going to call the article crap, but wanted to see what others thought about it. Around here in Ohio I cut my own wood, so its free. Even if I had to buy it and I burned a Cord a month at 150.00 Still beats a 400 to 500 dollar gas bill a month. Also if it was the same price as gas, might as well burn it, because nothing beats good wood heat! I would never turn my furnace up to 76 in the winter time. Sounds to me like someone is against wood burning (Tree Hugger). :hmm3grin2orange:
 
DanMan1

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Don't be so surprised. Natural gas is very cheap in some cities.
They compared 75k BTU's I think.

Red oak at best dried...3757 pounds. 16.8 million BTU's recoverable.
=447BTU's/lb
So 75k BTU's=16.8 LBs.

I wouldn't be surprised if I have stuffed 21lbs/hour in my modern stove during some windy cold winter days.
 
JeffHK454

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Who here has put 500 lbs of wood in a stove or furnace add-on in one day to heat a normal size house with semi-efficient insulation?

Maybe my Canadian brothers from way up north can tell stories of weeks on end with lows of -30 but in the mid-west I just don't have consumption like that.

Dan, doesn't 4 cords a month just sound like a lot a wood?!?
 
DanMan1

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JeffHK454 said:
Who here has put 500 lbs of wood in a stove or furnace add-on in one day to heat a normal size house with semi-efficient insulation?

Maybe my Canadian brothers from way up north can tell stories of weeks on end with lows of -30 but in the mid-west I just don't have consumption like that.

Dan, doesn't 4 cords a month just sound like a lot a wood?!?


Yes, if you average it out over 24 hours. Of course I stuff the stove at night, and don't put in any more till morning. So the average consumption during the night hours are low. Then again the house is kind of chilly when I get up. Not the best insulated house. Their 75kbtu figure is an energy consuption that a wood heater would never maintain over a 24 hour period, so you would not use the kind of wood it calculates to.
 

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