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-   -   Outdoor Wood stove/broiler (http://www.homesteadingtoday.com/general-homesteading-forums/homesteading-questions/508596-outdoor-wood-stove-broiler.html)

Adisiwaya 02/16/14 05:32 PM

Outdoor Wood stove/broiler
 
Hey as I was just trying to price out what it would cost to redo a small cabin. Has hook up for indoor wood stove but I don't want one due to a very curious pets and a little niece.

Is there a small forced air outdoor wood stove that is a forced air? How would someone go about hooking one up to a electric heater inside for a backup? I did go look on forums and can't find anything. Its little less than 800sq ft and I rather heat with wood because of the acreage of property coming with it...

Conhntr 02/16/14 06:42 PM

For 800sqft an indoor woodstove is the way to go. Get a nice fireplace fence to go around it to protect your loved ones
http://www.fireplaceproducts.co.uk/a...d-guard-700mm/

Im looking at an outdoor furnace as well but for 2100sqft and so i can let it burn when im at work. Amost everything i see is water/radiators. I cant imagine trying to duct hot air from an outside furnance in. Would need at least a water system and then blow hotnair over a radiator inside or something

Adisiwaya 02/16/14 07:52 PM

Got one question, do you need dual heat besides just woodstove for insurance? I was thinking of trying to figure out one I could leave going on outside and not worry so much.

Unregistered 1427921752 02/16/14 08:38 PM

Yep , they make outdoor forced air wood furnaces . Goggle is your friend .

Allen W 02/16/14 09:00 PM

There are some outdoor stove links in this earlier post. http://www.homesteadingtoday.com/gen...ing-up-me.html

Unregistered 1427921752 02/16/14 09:24 PM

Outdoor Wood Furnace | Lil'House Outside Wood Heater

This might be too big for you .

Unregistered 1427921752 02/16/14 09:30 PM

https://hughesbrotherssales.com/Furnaces.html

Try this one .

Adisiwaya 02/16/14 10:42 PM

The one from Hughes brother is quite awesome. No where near mn. I like that you don't need any major modifications to the house.

ChristieAcres 02/16/14 11:26 PM

We have had an indoor wood stove for five years now, babies in our living room, toddlers, little kids, a cat, and a dog (on occasion). Zero have been burned. I always warn little kids the stove is hot and bring them over to feel the hot air coming out. Animals never go near it as they can sense the heat. If so concerned, fence or guards can be purchased, don't feel the need ourselves.

blanket 02/17/14 09:26 AM

We heat our house with a Bryan furnace, very pleased with it. Russ

Adisiwaya 02/17/14 09:29 AM

Do you burn green wood? Why does it say not to? Just wondering

blanket 02/17/14 09:40 AM

Seasoned wood is better, but have been known to burn green locust and cherry. Creasote buildup would be my guess why they don't recommend green. I burn off the chimney every week. My stove has been lit since the 2nd week of November and we have been down to -22 without the wind chill with over a month of sub zero weather and the house stays about 72. I fill it 2-3 times a day depending on temp

Adisiwaya 02/17/14 10:02 AM

How big of a house do you have? I am liking theres quite alot

blanket 02/17/14 10:29 AM

3400 sq ft, no mess or smoke smell in the house as well. Neighbor has the smaller stove than mine and his house is about 2000 sq ft

Unregistered 1427921752 02/17/14 11:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by blanket (Post 6963875)
3400 sq ft, no mess or smoke smell in the house as well. Neighbor has the smaller stove than mine and his house is about 2000 sq ft

I might be getting interested in one of these myself . How is yours installed ? Tied into existing duct-work , through the wall , etc . ? How long have you had yours ?

Dupree 02/17/14 01:35 PM

Here's something to check out. Google "outdoor wood furnace forum"... If you have not already done so check it out. lots of GOOD info.

blanket 02/17/14 01:39 PM

It is installed next to the house with the duct going thru an existing basement window opening and the outlet side is tied into existing ductwork. The intake air is drawn from the basement.The stove has been installed since 2001

Unregistered 1427921752 02/17/14 02:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by blanket (Post 6964083)
It is installed next to the house with the duct going thru an existing basement window opening and the outlet side is tied into existing ductwork. The intake air is drawn from the basement.The stove has been installed since 2001

Thanks for responding , I would also like to know if it's out in the weather & how tall the flue is on it . Did your insurance company have any issues with it ?

blanket 02/17/14 02:12 PM

out in the weather and flue is 14'

ET1 SS 02/17/14 04:55 PM

I recommend radiant heated flooring.

We use a woodstove indoors, it heats water for us. That heated water circulates to a thermal-bank, and through our radiant floor.

A warm floor is much more efficient use of heat, as you use less heat to feel comfortable.

With the thermal-bank to store heat, our home is still very warm long after the fire has gone out.

We have six cats and a dog, none of them has ever been burned.

Our home is 2400 sq ft, and we go through 3 1/2 cords of mixed firewood each year [some green, some seasoned, some hardwood, some soft wood].

ronbre 02/18/14 11:35 AM

i have both, for a small cabin I would go with an indoor circulating wood stove..and teach children not to touch it..pets aren't that stupid

farmerscotty 02/19/14 05:52 PM

see my signature............been using these for 26 years

Adisiwaya 02/19/14 06:56 PM

I don't see your signature

free-2-b-me 02/20/14 07:52 AM

We have the lil house heater too . Live in a mobile home in New York . Works great !!! Sometimes too great .

Unregistered 1427921752 02/20/14 11:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by free-2-b-me (Post 6967868)
We have the lil house heater too . Live in a mobile home in New York . Works great !!! Sometimes too great .

Would you mind telling us how your return & supply duct are ran ?

Unregistered 1427921752 02/20/14 11:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ET1 SS (Post 6964341)
I recommend radiant heated flooring.

We use a woodstove indoors, it heats water for us. That heated water circulates to a thermal-bank, and through our radiant floor.

A warm floor is much more efficient use of heat, as you use less heat to feel comfortable.

With the thermal-bank to store heat, our home is still very warm long after the fire has gone out.

We have six cats and a dog, none of them has ever been burned.

Our home is 2400 sq ft, and we go through 3 1/2 cords of mixed firewood each year [some green, some seasoned, some hardwood, some soft wood].

What type of indoor stove do you have that heats water ? Could you post pictures of your system ? Do you also heat your domestic hot water with this system ?

ronbre 02/20/14 12:12 PM

my outdoor wood heater is actually in a shed that we also store wood in and has a chimney thru the roof, easier to load, no snow.

we have a water tank that heats water with antifreeze in it..that circulates through pex to our house and our sons, in OUR house we have heat exchangers for our hot water and for our forced air furnace ductwork..Joel has that and has in floor heat in his basement with a heat exchanger..and also has one in his garage..

works well but heating 2 houses and a garage uses a lot of wood..for a small cabin i would just use a wood circulator inside

Unregistered 1427921752 02/20/14 12:29 PM

I understand the outdoor boilers that heat & circulate water . I'm not interested in one of those . I am interested in an outdoor wood burning furnace that heats & circulates hot air & an inside wood burning stove that also heats water that could be used for domestic hot water .

Unregistered 1427921752 02/20/14 12:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Adisiwaya (Post 6967416)
I don't see your signature

I think he's referring to the link by the smiley faces at the bottom .

free-2-b-me 02/20/14 01:07 PM

The cold air supply is ran from the wood stove to the ducting in our living room . We made a hole in the wall and added a duct that blows the warm/hot air from the stove into the living room space . The registers in the living room are closed off making the system draw from the furthest places in the mobile home being the bedrooms . It draws the cold air from the bedrooms and blows back warm/hot into the living room . This causes a circulation loop that keeps the whole mobile home warm .
I hope I have explained it well for you .

Unregistered 1427921752 02/20/14 01:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by free-2-b-me (Post 6968286)
The cold air supply is ran from the wood stove to the ducting in our living room . We made a hole in the wall and added a duct that blows the warm/hot air from the stove into the living room space . The registers in the living room are closed off making the system draw from the furthest places in the mobile home being the bedrooms . It draws the cold air from the bedrooms and blows back warm/hot into the living room . This causes a circulation loop that keeps the whole mobile home warm .
I hope I have explained it well for you .

Yes , I understand how yours is done . Thanks


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