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Firewood, Heating and Wood Burning Equipment
What to look for when buying a wood stove...
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<blockquote data-quote="brenndatomu" data-source="post: 4010065" data-attributes="member: 78787"><p>I wasn't sure about Caddys, but that is only partially true for Yukon. The Jack line has combustion blowers, the rest have natural draft combustion. </p><p></p><p>I think you guys are misunderstanding what spidey is trying to do. I don't think he is trying to keep the house a steady 72 deg, rather maximize the available BTUs over as long of a time period as possible instead of the roast-and-freeze cycle that he has now.</p><p>Sounds like his old stove would do it well enough. Carry on spidey, I bet with some tinkering and lots of trial and error, you'll get it figured out. I usually don't take "you can't DO that" as my final answer either, sometimes it doesn't work, but most of the time I prove "them" wrong, at least partially, if not completely.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="brenndatomu, post: 4010065, member: 78787"] I wasn't sure about Caddys, but that is only partially true for Yukon. The Jack line has combustion blowers, the rest have natural draft combustion. I think you guys are misunderstanding what spidey is trying to do. I don't think he is trying to keep the house a steady 72 deg, rather maximize the available BTUs over as long of a time period as possible instead of the roast-and-freeze cycle that he has now. Sounds like his old stove would do it well enough. Carry on spidey, I bet with some tinkering and lots of trial and error, you'll get it figured out. I usually don't take "you can't DO that" as my final answer either, sometimes it doesn't work, but most of the time I prove "them" wrong, at least partially, if not completely. [/QUOTE]
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