Outdoor Wood Furnace Info
All-Purpose OWF Discussions => General Outdoor Furnace Discussion => Topic started by: rugerman on October 31, 2013, 03:28:16 PM
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anyone happened to no anything about these stoves
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Are you looking for a cheap stove again?
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I have one, 400HE , on my second year with it and there are several on the forum here that have them also , I am pleased with my choice after much research and i haven't been sorry i did it yet . I m sure others have their opinions of them and everyone thinks their brand is best, i own one and would do so again , I researched, compared prices , compared specs and saw a lot of stoves , I was really shocked when i called them , made an appt to visit shop and got a tour on how they were made and answered all my questions , i liked the fact it was heavier than most out their and appeared to be better built , the customer service is second to none in my opinion
I m very happy with my choice ,
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Are you looking for a cheap stove again?
The guys who sells them kills me, I played off as a customer at the lousiville show and he told me how his was gasification... It's not, not even close, he doesn't even understand the gasification process and then puts a big white sign on his display saying gasification. Although the craftsmanship is ok, there still expensive for what you get IMO...
For those who bought them and are happy, I have no bad feelings, it's just the part of lying about gasification and such that erks me
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I seen one just tonight. It was a non gasser but wow it is the heaviest duty built stove I have ever seen. You could cook a chicken on that grate they have in the firebox.
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I have a hoss 400 he love it very well built like everybody says the only problem I have is it has greats in it and the air blows from bottom from fan I cant keep a good coal bed in it they fall through the creats anybody else have this problems I burn all kinds of wood
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Yeah I think the grates would make it a pain in the ass to burn wood and keep a good coal bed. The stove is 1/2 inch thick but it could be 1 inch thick and ash can still eat through it.
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I have a hoss 400 he love it very well built like everybody says the only problem I have is it has greats in it and the air blows from bottom from fan I cant keep a good coal bed in it they fall through the creats anybody else have this problems I burn all kinds of wood
The grates on them seem to far apart, I think it's just 3/4" bar stock isn't it?!
I figured it would be hard to keep chunks from falling through...
Maybe you could put some heavy screen over the center of the grates?!
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interesting , I have the 400HE with same grates and the only issue i have is the coals tend to block the ports in the back if you don't keep them raked to the front and away from those 2 flue ports , I usually have 3- 6 inches of coals and make sure i spread them out and away from the 2 ports in the back , only thing falls through is a fine ash in the bottom , no chunks
I think it is more on how it is loaded , i had to adjust my log cuts so they would be 30-40 inches instead of normal 18 inches , I also make sure i don't put big rounds in there but i split everything and pack it in there tight , when i put the rounds in there there is too much open space between them and they tend to bridge , I burn all kinds of wood , green , seasoned ,
timing also probably helps I tend to load mine when its half down instead of waiting until its completely down to reload , i average about every 6 hours when its cold , but i have 2 large greenhouses I'm heating and they can run through the wood when its cold ,
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Do you have any extra water storage on the boiler to help extend the heat at night, I typically don't suggest it except in a case like yours where you are heating greenhouses, there is a huge surge on the system at night when the sun is gone and very little during the day in applications like this and a storage tank definately helps to buffer that load