Pellet stoves

GailT

<font color=blue>I'm ba-ack!!!!<br><font color=mag
Joined
Apr 28, 2001
Messages
4,302
With the soaring price of gas I went out today and purchased a pellet stove, I can't get it for a few months, the depeand for them is high. Anyone have a pellet stove and what do you thin of the way it heats your house. TIA :earsgirl:
 
I had one in my old house (5 years ago) and it did ok for us. It wasn't too bad to refill the hopper with pellets. They come in 50 lb bags (maybe smaller). You'd have to do a cost analysis to see how much you're saving. My old house had a heat pump with was expensive to run and not very effective in the very cold weather (below 35) so the pellet stove ran 24/7 until it needed cleaning (every 2-3 days). It was also on a thermostat that it would go from low heat to hight heat when needed. I think there are models that will auto-ignite with thermostatic control (just like a furnace).

I liked the glow during the night (I had a vaulted ceiling) and the sound of the blower wasn't too bad. Sorta like one of those sound machines.

And my cats LOVED it!!!
 
We had one in our previous house and absolutely loved it. The only reason we didn't put one in our new house is because when the power goes out, the pellet stove doesn't work. It heated well, wasn't messy, was easy to fill (even for me) and pellets take up a lot less room than wood. I can't say enough good about them. Debby
 
We have a nice one in our house and it's AWESOME :banana: to overcome the electricity requirement get a generator for when the power goes out!

We got a powerful stove that heats close to 2000 square feet all on one level. it's very efficient and easy to use.... runs off the thermostat as someone said... I would be without one.... I think we need to get another one to heat the other 1000 square feet though.... I really despise being reliant on oil right now...
 

Just a little thing to consider ( and I dont want to start a debate) but , if you live in an erea where polution is a problem , you have to realise that any wood stove or pellet stove or fire place will send a lot of pollutant in the air.


Last yaer , in Montreal , we had a week of smog alert in the dead of winter , and , according to reports , it was due to the over use of fire places and heating stove. We decided to stop using our slowburning stove in tha basement and use it only in times of power outage. We installed electronicthermostat in the rooms we use the most , preset to send heat when we need it most , and saved a lot of money on our electric bill.
 
It's a good point about pollution & that's another reason to use a pellet stove versus a wood stove or other fossil fuel... Our newspaper had a report on it last week, since it burns pellet's that are made out of sawdust and other things that would be considered waste otherwise.... Here's more info about the pollution from a pellet stove:

Pellet fuel is more economical than natural gas and many other nonrenewable fossil fuels, and it's pricing has remained relatively stable, since 1990. Today's pellet appliances burn at almost 100% combustion, with an overall heating efficiency of 81+%; generating dramatically less pollution than any fossil fuels, while providing more value for your heating dollar. Pellet stove emissions are environmentally (carbon) neutral, producing virtually no particulate emissions or greenhouse gases.
 
We just recently installed one in the basement of our new home and it makes a huge difference. We aren't into our usual Wisconsin winter yet but I'm sure it will handle it just fine. I installed one for my parents last winter and they significantly reduced their heating costs, they went from about 600 gallons of fuel oil before the stove to less than 200 gallons last year. They were able to keep the house about 72 degrees day and night.

I have to disagree on the pollution that a pellet stove creates. Please take a look at this article:

Pellet stove fuel
As the name suggests, pellet stoves burn "pellets." These actually are recycled sawdust, wood shavings, walnut and peanut shells, and similar biomass wastes that are ground up, compressed and extruded. They look like rabbet feed and they're sold in convenient 40-pound bags.

Pellets have several advantages over wood. For one, they're environmentally responsible. They turn wastes that would otherwise be dumped at landfills into energy. Intense compression squeezes the moisture out of pellets, dropping their moisture content to below 8%-- very dry, compared to cord wood at from 20% to 30%. The dryer the fuel, the more heat it can produce.

Both because of the fuel's consistency and because of the stove's combustion mechanics, pellets burn very hot. This means they burn cleaner and more efficiently than cord wood. Compared to old wood stoves, which carry from 30 to 50 grams of particulates per hour in their smoke, or new, EPA-certified stoves that give off about 5 grams per hour, pellet stoves have very low particulate emissions, some at less than 1 gram per hour. For example, in independent tests, Breckwell's pellet stove showed less than .27 grams per hour of particulate matter.

Unlike the wood-burning stoves of the 1970s, which converted from 50% to 60% of their fuel to heat, pellet stoves offer 75% to 90% overall efficiency (be sure to look for "overall efficiency" when comparing). In fact, so much heat is extracted that most pellet stoves may be vented horizontally out through a wall instead of through a conventional chimney (see below).

Pellets also create much less ash than cord wood and they don't give off creosote, a common wood stove and fireplace hazard that collects in chimneys, causing chimney fires, and that blackens glass doors.

You can read the whole thing here:
http://www.hometips.com/cs-protected/guides/pellet.html
 
We installed a pellet stove last year and bought the battery back up (doesn't go for days, only about 24 hours). We love it. It really warms our house so that we don't use our propane. I would recommend them to anyone. The bags of pellets are easy to store, no bugs like wood nor mess. Go for it. :banana:
 
Thank you for the clarification about the environmental impact of pelet stove. I am always happy to learn something new ! :goodvibes
 
can you buy a pellet stove that doesn't require electricity to start??

My parents were looking into buying one but I think if they realized that it won't run w/o electric they might think about wood burning instead. They live in the woods and sometimes in the winter they can go w/o power for a few days at a time, so that wouldn't help much.

tricia.
 


Disney Vacation Planning. Free. Done for You.
Our Authorized Disney Vacation Planners are here to provide personalized, expert advice, answer every question, and uncover the best discounts. Let Dreams Unlimited Travel take care of all the details, so you can sit back, relax, and enjoy a stress-free vacation.
Start Your Disney Vacation
Disney EarMarked Producer






DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter

Add as a preferred source on Google

Back
Top Bottom