Frequently asked questions
There are just a few questions that we get repeatedly. Here they are.
"Is ? ?
? species of firewood unsafe or unsuitable to burn? A friend told me it
would produce a lot of creosote or burn too hot."
It
seems like almost every species of wood has been tagged as unsuitable by
someone. This is our response:
A
few species of wood can produce dangerous emissions
and most of them have dangerous sounding names, like poison sumac (swamp
sumac), poison dogwood, poison elderberry, poison elder, poison oak. The
smoke can contain the same compounds that cause allergic reactions on
skin, but when airborne can cause respiratory distress if inhaled.
Aside
from these few examples, we don't consider any normal species of wood
dangerous or inappropriate for burning based on the idea that they
produce much more creosote. There are woods with
sticky sap in their bark and others that can't be split by hand and so
are not as desirable as others. But creosote is a product of combustion,
not a component of wood. If burned in bright, hot fires, much less
creosote is formed from whatever wood is burned. This includes the
pitchy bark of pine and spruce and the volatile bark of white (paper)
birch.
Our
advice is to try whatever firewood you have available. Make sure the
wood is properly seasoned because all wood species burn poorly and
produce smoky fires if their moisture content is too high. Extremely dry
wood, like kiln-dried lumber, can also produce smoky fires. If you have
some very dry wood available, mix it with regular firewood to avoid
excessive smoke.
Burn
bright, hot fires. Don't let your fires smolder.
We
burn a lot of wood that others might consider junk. But maybe junk wood
is the most environmentally suitable type to burn because it is useless
for any other purpose. In our view, aside from the few poisonous
species, no wood species is junk unless it has
been painted, treated or is salt-laden from being in the ocean.
I have an outside chimney and my stove is in the basement, so I have
serious backdrafting problems. What can I do to fix this?
If there were a simple and effective way to solve the problem of cold
backdrafting chimneys, you can be sure it would be prominent on the web
site. There is no simple solution because the problem has to do with the
physics of cold chimneys and warm houses. That is why we are so adamant
that chimneys belong inside houses.
If your chimney is metal, you could uninstall it and reinstall it
inside using a ceiling support instead of a wall support and tee. By the
way, just about every homeowner faced with the issue of where to run the
chimney will claim there is no way it can run indoors. The reality,
however, is that where there is a will, there is always a way.
If your chimney is masonry, you could try installing an insulated
stainless steel liner. This MIGHT help to reduce the frequency and
strength of the backdraft but will not entirely solve the problem.
Also, regardless of the type of chimney, the strength of cold
backdrafts are always affected by the leakage pattern of the house. The
leakier it is at high levels, the worse the backdraft. Therefore, you
can try to reduce the strength of the backdraft by sealing attic hatches
and ceiling fixtures and keeping second floor windows closed and tightly
latched.
Unfortunately, there is no sure-fire solution.
Questions about conventional fireplaces:
1. "Why does my fireplace smoke?"
2. "How can I
increase the efficiency of my fireplace?"
3. "Where can I get a two-sided fireplace?"
Please note that we are woodheat.org, so we
don't promote or support the use of conventional fireplaces because they are wasteful and polluting.
If you want a conventional fireplace just for fire viewing, you won't
find any support here, so please don't contact us for advice.
Also, with so many variables
involved, we can't diagnose smoking problems by email. So, if your
conventional fireplace smokes,
as most of them do, here are the options we recommend:
- If it is a masonry fireplace, install an EPA
certified fireplace insert with a stainless steel chimney liner
running to the top of the fireplace chimney. Properly installed
inserts almost never smoke.
- If it is a factory-built fireplace, take it out and
install an EPA certified fireplace. (sorry, that's just the hard
reality)
- If you live in the city, install a gas insert ( not a log
set).
- Don't use it.
To increase the efficiency of a conventional masonry
fireplace, install a fireplace insert. It is the only real way to boost
efficiency and cut smoke emissions. Glass doors make almost no
difference and accessories like tubular grates that are promoted as
efficiency boosters can deliver some heat, but also run the risk of
overheating the fireplace and combustibles around it. Conventional
fireplaces are for decorative use only and it is unwise to try to use
them as heaters.
A lot of people contact us wanting a two-sided or
see-through fireplace. Two-sided fireplaces have a very bad reputation
for poor performance and certainly can't be used for serious wood
heating, even those few that are designed to burn clean. Therefore we
don't offer advice on them, except to suggest that they are a bad idea.
How can I use my wood stove to heat water for my in-floor radiant
heating system?
You can't. There is no way that a water coil or tank in a firebox or
any kind of heat collector in the flue pipe will produce enough heat to
make a serious contribution to in-floor radiant heating. For radiant
heating you need a boiler.
Besides, if you take a lot of heat from the firebox, you will get
smoky, inefficient combustion. If you take a lot of heat from the
flue gases after they leave the stove, you'll likely compromise chimney
draft, leading to other problems.
Even heating enough water for washing – that is, domestic hot water
(DWH) – is a costly and complicated undertaking, and to our knowledge
there is not a single EPA certified stove that has a certified DWH
collector option, mainly for the reasons cited above.
"Where can I find parts or information for this old ******* stove
I have?"
We are not equipped to help with commercial
questions of this type. Here are some resources that might help.
http://www.antiquestoves.com/
http://www.stovepartsunlimited.com/
http://hearth.com/
"What stove do you recommend that I buy?"
We don't recommend any particular brands or models. We
do recommend that you buy an EPA certified low emission, high efficiency
stove because it will give you far better performance and pay you back
the modest extra cost in no time.
Visit as many wood heat retailers as you can find and
listen to what they have to say. Once you have visited two or three, the
ones who know what they're talking about will stand out. Here is a hint:
beware of stove dealers who don't heat their own houses with wood or
don't have operating wood stoves in their showrooms -- their advice is
probably not worth much.
"Where can I find a good set of wood stove plans? I want to
build my own."
We strongly recommend that you don't attempt to build
your own stove. Here's why.
You can't burn wood cleanly and efficiently without a
good combustion system, and you can't design and build a one-off
combustion system that is any good. One of the reasons why the price of good wood
stoves start at about $1000 is because it took a lot of practice, trial
and error and bucket loads of money to get them to work properly and to
pass both safety and emissions test standards.
Thirty years ago wood burning technology was crude,
sort of like folk-technology and anyone with a welder could call himself
a manufacturer. It is not like that any more and it is a good thing. A
lot of folks got burned, both literally and financially, buying stoves
built by people who didn't know what they were doing.
There are no plans available for a good wood stove. If you were to find stove
plans they would undoubtedly show you how
to make a lousy one because no one in their right mind would suggest
that a wood stove is a project for amateurs (you may be able to weld,
but that's the easy part).
Here is our advice: Go out and buy yourself the best stove you can afford and invest
your do-it-yourself time in getting your firewood in. Then sit back and
enjoy the cozy beautiful fire.


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