Jeff7
Lifer
I, the Internet guru of the house, have been tasked with finding information about stove types. And so I turn to the many users of Anandtech for help.
We've been considering wood pellet stoves, kerosene stoves, and propane heaters. We're currently using electric heat, which is quite expensive. There is a wood stove here, but there's a few problems with it, mainly that the smoke doesn't like to go up the chimney, and the other issue that the chimney quickly accumulates this black, crunchy, oily residue, the name of which I can't remember right now. It's been cleaned, checked, etc...a multitude of things done to try to get the smoke to go up, but it just doesn't want to; it'd rather come pouring out into the cellar the second the front is opened for refueling. So an alternative is needed.
What has been found is that any of the 3 potential options will need a constant power source, which is a negative. The power went out last Christmas for almost a week, and it was only the POS, smoky wood stove that kept most of the house warm. Buying or building a backup power system shouldn't be too difficult. I'd think that a charging circuit, some sealed lead-acid batteries, and an inverter hooked to a relay should do the trick. But it depends on the price of a pre-built backup system too.
In any event, I need information on the various kinds of stoves. Owners with pellet, kerosene, or propane heaters are invited to post their thoughts on each kind. This is to be a permanent fixture in a basement, and we don't need (and can't afford) any of those multi-thousand-dollar fancy things, just something that puts out heat.
We've been considering wood pellet stoves, kerosene stoves, and propane heaters. We're currently using electric heat, which is quite expensive. There is a wood stove here, but there's a few problems with it, mainly that the smoke doesn't like to go up the chimney, and the other issue that the chimney quickly accumulates this black, crunchy, oily residue, the name of which I can't remember right now. It's been cleaned, checked, etc...a multitude of things done to try to get the smoke to go up, but it just doesn't want to; it'd rather come pouring out into the cellar the second the front is opened for refueling. So an alternative is needed.
What has been found is that any of the 3 potential options will need a constant power source, which is a negative. The power went out last Christmas for almost a week, and it was only the POS, smoky wood stove that kept most of the house warm. Buying or building a backup power system shouldn't be too difficult. I'd think that a charging circuit, some sealed lead-acid batteries, and an inverter hooked to a relay should do the trick. But it depends on the price of a pre-built backup system too.
In any event, I need information on the various kinds of stoves. Owners with pellet, kerosene, or propane heaters are invited to post their thoughts on each kind. This is to be a permanent fixture in a basement, and we don't need (and can't afford) any of those multi-thousand-dollar fancy things, just something that puts out heat.