sostoudt;3380624; said:how about a solar hotwater heater that way you dont have to deal with the wood. dont know how viable this suggestion is as i see your in canada.
does the system on the stove shut off automatically or is it manual, but i guess the biggest question about this system do you have enough wood available or can get enough for the whole year and future years?
i guess you could use it to offset costs when woods available buy shutting off the heater.
they sell super efficent stoves that barely pollute i think, i see them on the green channel, at first i was like how the hell can those be green
I have lots of wood (40 acres of bush) so that is not a concern, but in the summer, the solar option would make a lot of sense. I could probably get 3 months of warm enough weather...
sostoudt;3380631; said:thats probably just because they dont want to get sued, im sure it would work if you installed a chimeny to carry the smoke.
Yes - I will investigate this more throughly as it would be optimal.
Knowdafish;3380632; said:Wrap copper tubing around the exhaust vent/flue for your wood burning furnace. No furnace is 100% efficient and you could capture some of the heat that is being lost.
Had not thought of this at all - VERY GOOD IDEA as you are correct, the exiting chimney/tubing does get very hot.
BlackwaterFL;3380642; said:Or try the solar. I nknow there would even be enough sun up there to keep the temp up. My father built one for his indoor pool and hot water heater for showers. It is cheap to make and I am sure you could make it work with some form of thermostats and stuff...Sorry to hear about your bills ..My god I thought my $400 a month was expensive
Might be a good idea for the few summer months we get.
Knowdafish;3380645; said:The problem with solar is that the water freezes in the tubing in Winter, especially in Canada!
Yes.... I would not get very many months of usage out of it... Remind me why I live in this cold climate?