Lori Ann":2r5itt1t said:
Next Monday we are replacing the POS wood stove that came with the house with a new Lopi stove. We are looking forward to finding out firsthand whether the benefits of a wood stove are all that you guys (and others) say. It's my first wood stove (my 2nd, if you count the one it's replacing.)
One thing I have been mulling over is where does wood combustion fit into the energy, CO2, particulates, etc. picture? Obviously, wood is a renewable resource, but beyond that I am not familiar with the specifics of how it pollutes (all combustion pollutes to one degree or another.)
Thanks,
Warren
Hi Warren,
When we built our house in '93 we installed a Lopi wood stove and couldn't be happier with it! (I would say that you have made an excellent choice!). Our Lopi has an intake at the bottom of it that "pipes" outside air from the crawl space beneath the house. Although you can equip these stoves with squirrel cage type fans for disseminating the warm air into the house, I've merely chosen to place a fan on a mantle behind the stove which blows around the stove pipe and the stove top. Since, our Lopi is 14 yrs old, most likely some type of improvements have been made in that time to improve efficiency and decrease harmful emissions of the stove that you have purchased.
A visual clue as to how clean/efficient a wood stove is burning is to view the smoke coming from the chimney. If you can readily see through it, then it is efficient. The type of wood and how well seasoned and dry it is will affect the efficiency of heat/burning/emissions. If wood condition is not adhered to properly, a person is "courting" not only inefficiency but the likelihood of creosote formation in your chimney that in a worse case scenario can plug a chimney, ignite in a roaring flame (like a blow torch with the sound of a freight train running through your house) and ultimately a house fire. Additionally a creosote plugged chimney can create a "backdraft" effect and when the door of the stove is opened and fresh air (O2) is introduced a ball of fire can explode out to you (read personal injury and house fire). (I personally have been witness to each of these phenomenons). (Have I scared you yet?

) That is not my intent, but too many folks don't take proper care of their wood stoves and chimneys and as a result, they call me out in the middle of the night to extinguish their house fire.
I've stated that I use wood off my own property. I try to have wood cut, split and stacked at least a year before I use it. Additionally, I supplement my stove wood supply with manufactured logs that I purchase at the CO - OP supply in town. There are two types available at our C0 -OP. (One is a hotter/faster burning log...like the old "presto logs" and the other is a not as hot/slower burning log). At night time we have one of the slower burning logs in the stove and at times during the day when we will be away from the house for extended periods of time. When we are home we do the combination of the slower burning logs with the natural logs or just natural logs alone.
When used as I have described, our stove pipe is always impeccably clean and I've NEVER had a chimney fire in it!
With a new (to you) stove, I recommend frequent inspection of your chimney until you feel comfortable that the combustion process is efficient and complete.
From the time we "fire up" our wood stove in the fall (ie: October) to the spring (ie: March). Our wood stove is constantly hot. (I let it die down occasionally just enough that I can actually open the door and VERY CAREFULLY remove the ashes. (Then I place wood in the stove and with the hand bellows breathe flame back to life and don't even need a match).
(One match for a whole winter season of heat).
Our home is a two story 2200 Sq ft home. With the fan behind the stove and a large ceiling fan in the upstairs hallway we manage to keep comfortable. (The large ceiling fan upstairs is an exhaust fan that sucks the warm air from downstairs to the second story). (We do have individual electric wall heaters in various rooms of the house, which on occasion are turned on briefly to remove any chill in a particular room).
(P.S. When you remove ash from your stove, take it immediately outside and deposit it in a safe spot far from your house.....I've been on a number of house fires caused by ashes in an ash bucket set just outside the back door of a house!)
I'm sure that you and none of our fellow c-brats would do this, but DO NOT through flammable fluids in a wood stove in order to start the wood stove fire. (Don't laugh....I've been on a house fire that was caused exactly by that!.....and by the way there is no house in that spot now!)
As far as your concern of polluting the air we breathe with unhealthy emissons/particulates etc. I try to be cognizant of how I affect "mother earth/air. We all pollute in some way or another, (I make shopping lists in order to spend less time driving and blowing diesel pollutants into the air, recycle cans, bottles, paper etc.) But I certainly enjoy the warmth of wood heat, and am fortunate to live in the country where my neighbors are some distance aways from me. (In some communities in this area aesthetic wood stove burning is banned at times during the year).
I apologize for the lengthy post that probably bores some of you, but remember this is the "pub" where we sit and converse over a beer or three about a myriad of subjects. Additionally, you never know when you might decide to throw your Wallas stove overboard and these comments I've made might prevent you from making any mistakes that might not keep your C-Dory a float when you install a wood stove on your fine vessel. :wink
(Cool, I even mentioned C-Dory and wood stove in the same sentence.. :smiled )