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Messages - willieG

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1846
ontario canada...still firing  once a day for a  little "boost" in the morning  and  domestic  hot  water...2 years  ago  i never  shut down until the  10th  of  June

1847
Central Boiler / Re: $12,300!
« on: May 13, 2008, 08:07:49 PM »
i agree the  25 year warranty  should  cost  nothing...it is worth nothing.....limited warranty..covering what.....manufacturing defects...what  the hell is  that? a bubble in the  paint?
your  stove pops a hole...try and convince  the  dealer  that is  a  manufacturing error.... you might  get  a  new  blower if  that  goes (pro rated)

i know  a  guy  who got a hole in his  stove in  3 years...his  warranty after  bitching for  a  week....the  dealer  gave him a  patch  for  free (a piece of  steel) and told him  to  get it  welded on at his own expence

i think  most  warranties are  worded by  lawyers to sound  good  but  mean  nothing
another guy i  know  has had  his  stove  for  10 years...his  blower  rotted off the  stove (it  does sit outside)..he repaired it  his  self  because  warranty on  the  blower  is only  one  year...(although the  blower still worked it  just  fell off the  stove)
both these  problems were on  two different  companies  stoves...both  warranties did nothing (although i tend  to agree..a blower  after  ten years would owe me nothing)

i know  no one  whom has

had a  good experience with warranty..has  anyone ?


1848
General Outdoor Furnace Discussion / Re: ???
« on: May 12, 2008, 08:15:20 PM »
probably but not me..lol

there are  some  whom i think get tired of  cutting  wood or  those  that  dont  like  standing out in the  cold to put  wood in..i put  my stove in a  wood  shed...nice and  warm and out of the  weather  when i have to stoke it up..my wife and  two sons  go to the  bush and we work as a team and  use  this  time  for  family  "bonding"..actually is  fun..even after 7 winters of  it

the  one  thing  we  make  sure of..we  are  always at least one  year  ahead with our  wood  supply..that  way  we  can  shoose what  days  to  cut  wood..we never have to go in bad  weather or when one of  us has "other plans"..we  go  on  days  that  suit  us, this  keeps it  fun

1849
General Outdoor Furnace Discussion / Re: shark bite fittings
« on: April 30, 2008, 08:43:25 PM »
i have not  used them  but  everything i find on the  net  says  for  pex they will work  fine

1850
General Outdoor Furnace Discussion / Re: What did you use?
« on: April 01, 2008, 06:15:56 PM »
7 years  ago i used the same as you..that  was about all the  choice you had...my stove is 250  from the house and  i think i lose  about 7 degrees in a 500 foot round trip counting  what  heat  loss there is in the bare copper pipes in the house and what leaks off the  uninsulated domestic water heat exchanger

i will be building another  stove  for  my newly aquired "other property" maybe this  year..i am thinking of  the  newer stuff that is  foam over the pipes inside a  plastic  tile..but i think i will also  run it  down  another  unperferated  tile....i am  thinking  heat  loss to dead air around the heat  pipes  will be  less that  heat  loss to moist dirt around  them?

my next  furnace will be  able  to be  much  closer to the  building ..i am  sure  less  than 100 feet,  so the  expense  won't  be  much  more  for  another tile and  the  option of  pulling it  out  and  replacing it without  digging is  there also (likely  never  need too though)

here is one  type of what i am talking about..there are  many more i am sure but this will give you an idea of what i am talking  about

http://www.urecon.com/english/furnaces.html

1851
Fire Wood / Re: The Best Wood
« on: March 28, 2008, 05:37:49 PM »
nice  page..lots of  good  info

1852
Home Made / Re: convert
« on: March 28, 2008, 05:36:51 PM »
very cool, did you build it?
yes double..i built it...i  am planning on  another one in a  year  when i retire...i have  aquired another property and i want to build  one  with  a  (i have a tank allready) 1200 gallon  tank..i am hoping to  fire it  one time a day at most and have it  keep the things near  60 when i am there and  above  freezing  while i am away .....im not  much on  making  refractry so i am thinking of  a 36 inch pipe inside a 42 inch pipe filled  with fire brick between them...i hope  to achieve  very high  temps  burning  this  way....then have  the  heat move  out  the  chimey into a second  barrel that will have  tubes  (big  enough i can brush them) for  the  heat  to go  through and  have them surrounded by  water...then circulate the water  through my 1200 gallon tank untill the  set  temp is  achieved

you think this  may work/..i am looking for all kinds of input..then i  can have way  more  ideas  to contemplate on


1853
Home Made / Re: convert
« on: March 27, 2008, 06:20:11 PM »
here is mine..in my  7th year..newer model coming in 2010 (when i retire)

1854
Fire Wood / Re: The Best Wood
« on: March 27, 2008, 06:09:14 PM »
::) Anyone have any ideas of which kind of wood is the best to burn, I have been burning a lot of sycamore and it does not do to bad. I also have used oak, locust. What wood last the longest.  ;D

a pound of  wood has  about 8600 BTU init...so if you have equally dry wood..the  heavier wood (denser) will have more BTU in it and last longer

also if you burn wet wood (unseasoned) it will take about 1000 BTU to evaperate each pound of water that is in the wood...so you can see it is very important to burn only seasoned wood

i guess (only my interpritation) that means if you have a 100 pounds of  dry oak (20 percent or less moisture)











100 pounds of  wood  produces 860,000 BTU..less 20,000 to evaperate the moisture..leaves you 840,000 BTU of heat
100 pounds of green wood (60 percent moisture)  same amount of BTU 860,000 less 60,000...leaves you 800,000

according to  the wood  charts i have seen (they must take into account the moisture of 20 percent ..a cord of  dry oak weighs about 4000 pounds and produces 25.7 million BTUs

so wet would be  another 40 percent less BTU's  per cord...about 10 million ..so   wet wood  would  lessen your  available heat to about 15 million from  25 million

if my math is  right..burn  dry wood




try the link for a firewood chart

http://mb-soft.com/juca/print/firewood.html

1855
Site Suggestions / Re: Manufacturer List
« on: March 26, 2008, 07:44:02 PM »
list may be a good  thing..we  could  see votes  for  and  against by  real  owners

1856
Fire Wood / Re: keeping it in the round
« on: March 26, 2008, 06:13:07 PM »
i cut wood each winter..and i like to  stay  ahead..i store  my wood inside..dont  split  any and  am always 2 winters  ahead..you will find if  you get  wood  seasoned this long...you  will get  very little  smoke and very fine  ashes

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