[Help] Wood Burners - price and installation advice

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zefarelly

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
22,789
Sussex, by the sea
I remember I made a twin chamber smoker and first BBQ I went to buy wood was quite supprised at the cost but then found wood brickets slow burning and cheap duly purchased what a terrable mistake how I didn't poison anyone heaven knows all the food had a rather plastic taste it was only then I investigated what these brickets were actually made from and its ingreadants included things like recycled chip board and marine ply I guess the taste was from the glues within these products

Whilst Our loft/roof was being done, I did accidentally burn a pice of modern treated timber, never again, god knows what they do to it, obviosuly it buys you time to get out the house alive, but it smiokes like hell and stinks.

tyres are much better. :laugh:
 




Rogero

Well-known member
Aug 4, 2010
5,834
Shoreham
We enjoy ours most nights.The best selection was from a firm near Foord just south of Arundel. Make sure that you get a multi fuel type that can take wood and smokeless coal.
 


Boroseagull

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2003
2,148
Alhaurin de la Torre
We, albeit in Southern Spain, use a combination of woodburner fire with built in integral fan and a pellet burner stove that fires the central heating. Sometimes, like now when it's cold and wet, both are in use. As the central heating boiler is on program (morning and evening) the woodburner supplements it. The secret is the quality and type of wood burned, in our case olive, orange, lemon and almond. It's available locally, very well seasoned and that is the secret.

So if you burn seasoned oak that should be available to you all will be well.
 




Shippers

Member
Jan 12, 2016
94
I fitted a stove with a stainless liner up the chimney stack and love it on those cold night with a fire burning (find it very relaxing), there are some good websites which help you on the regs for an install which I used (I think I used stove man), I have had the flu swept a few times and the guy says hardly anything comes out. I brought an Ekol Clarity 8, which is DEFRA approved, which means it burns really efficiently and can supposedly be used in smoke free zones (not a requirement in Seaford). I only burn wood and it runs very clean not leaving a lot of ash behind and hardly any smoke can be seen from top of the chimney when running up to temperature.

https://www.directstoves.com/ekol-c...MIt7Wy-vmJ7gIVCNPtCh2ElwRcEAAYASAAEgJrQvD_BwE
 




cjd

Well-known member
Jun 22, 2006
6,311
La Rochelle

I live in the countryside in rural France and have two woodburners. They do get ( obviously ) very hot and will seriously burn the skin of a child or elderly person if they stumble against it.
 


Questions

Habitual User
Oct 18, 2006
25,513
Worthing
Old boy over the road, in his 90's, ex Power station engineer, burns coal 24/7. I'm amazed Asbestositis hasn't got him.

If it does get him remember it’s flame proof.
 


Billy the Fish

Technocrat
Oct 18, 2005
17,594
Haywards Heath
Go for it, don't listen to the naysayers.

We installed a Hunter stove 3 years ago and it's still my favourite home improvement.

I didn't bother with multi fuel as I don't need to burn coal, although lots of the salesmen we spoke to told us to do it.
A couple of salesmen also said to get the biggest burner you can afford, this is bollocks! A 4k is enough to heat most rooms.
We paid extra to get a HETAS registered installer as we didn't want to mess with something that could burn our house down. He was very good and have some good advice, he said there's lots of people in the industry who will just bodge installs without knowing what they're doing.
 
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Billy the Fish

Technocrat
Oct 18, 2005
17,594
Haywards Heath
I know you're not one of those that will insist that, because it's in The Guardian, it's lefty nonsense, but you might want to look at this:

https://www.theguardian.com/environ...iple-harmful-indoor-air-pollution-study-finds

This does sound like a load of nonsense from a scientist with an agenda, I'd be interested to watch what some of these people were doing as it sounds like user error.

On mine if you open the door quickly it initially sucks a bit of smoke into the room so I don't do that.
If the air intake is fully open before you open the door the draw is too strong for anything to get out into the room, even with the door open you can see it being sucked up the flue.
 


Worried Man Blues

Well-known member
Feb 28, 2009
7,295
Swansea
I live in the countryside in rural France and have two woodburners. They do get ( obviously ) very hot and will seriously burn the skin of a child or elderly person if they stumble against it.

Believe it or not they'll burn any age between if they stumble against it, even when pissed!
 


ALBION28

Active member
Jul 26, 2011
315
DONCASTER
As someone who nearly died from that old thing called flu. I remain vulnerable because of that and age. Let me be clear log burners in my area are plentiful and it can be difficult to breathe particularly during the winter. This is not just some fancy notion. It is a real and present danger. Those that care please consider others.
 




nicko31

Well-known member
Jan 7, 2010
18,580
Gods country fortnightly
Buy one called a Varde Ovne. Generally I agree they aren't all that eco but nor is owning a dog!!

They are lot more efficient than an open fire, if they are run hot they run quite clean with dry wood

The hidden cost no one considered is the flu, a twin walled one is about £120 per metre so install can end up costing more than the burner.
 


zefarelly

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
22,789
Sussex, by the sea
Buy one called a Varde Ovne. Generally I agree they aren't all that eco but nor is owning a dog!!

They are lot more efficient than an open fire, if they are run hot they run quite clean with dry wood

The hidden cost no one considered is the flu, a twin walled one is about £120 per metre so install can end up costing more than the burner.

I did mention it . . .If you live in an older house with a proper chimney, subject to condition, you don't need one.

The added benefit being it heats that whole part of the house on the way up!
 


mikeyjh

Well-known member
Dec 17, 2008
4,607
Llanymawddwy
I'm thinking of getting a wood burner for my front room. I currently have an open fire.

I'm sold on More heat efficiency, less use of logs, will look better, improve value of house, warmer house even if not burning apparently .

On other hand its expensive to install c £1700 , not exactly green, and there is something about open flames not behind a glass door ...

Any NSC experience, advice , thoughts ?

We have a couple, had one open fire but replaced it. You just will not get anything like the efficiency of heat as you would from a burner. One of ours is an Essential Ironheart, very big but incredibly efficient, the other a more standard 'living room' job. Takes a bit more patience and wood.

In terms of how 'green' it is, our house is about 7,000 sq ft and we spent < £300 on heating oil last year, heating is on for a couple of ours in the morning and (upstairs) in the evening.....
 




Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,778
Fiveways
This does sound like a load of nonsense from a scientist with an agenda, I'd be interested to watch what some of these people were doing as it sounds like user error.

On mine if you open the door quickly it initially sucks a bit of smoke into the room so I don't do that.
If the air intake is fully open before you open the door the draw is too strong for anything to get out into the room, even with the door open you can see it being sucked up the flue.

You sound like Donald Trump.
 


A mex eyecan

Well-known member
Nov 3, 2011
3,885
Buy one called a Varde Ovne. Generally I agree they aren't all that eco but nor is owning a dog!!

They are lot more efficient than an open fire, if they are run hot they run quite clean with dry wood

The hidden cost no one considered is the flu, a twin walled one is about £120 per metre so install can end up costing more than the burner.

Quick, burn all dogs!
 


Hampster Gull

Well-known member
Dec 22, 2010
13,465
Yes, i started down this route. The unused fireplace i found out had asbestos cement, quote just before xmas of £2k to get rid. That has paused my progress but suspect i will go ahead
 


Bodian

Well-known member
May 3, 2012
14,275
Cumbria
Been dithering for about five years after a lifetime of open fires. Finally swapped and got a stove installed this autumn. Absolutely love it - house warmer all the time (and cleaner). During the night/day when not on, there's no cold air entering. Cat loves it, as he no longer gets sparks on him. You can light it and go for a walk in the evening without worry.

Go for it.

But don't underestimate the volume of wood you'll get through, and the cost of it. Huge. Really glad we chose a multi-fuel, so we can burn smokeless coal when we light it early, and switch to wood when we sit in front of it. Some say you shouldn't burn them both together, but not really sure why not. The smokeless stuff isn't being banned - and sits and glows for ages, and is relatively cheaper for the heat output.

https://www.acrheatproducts.com/stove/acr-stoves/oakdale
 




severnside gull

Well-known member
May 16, 2007
24,827
By the seaside in West Somerset
You have to decide wood or multi fuel. Wood won’t stay in overnight but multifuel is messier. Also decide if you want a back burner but (only) if it is linked to your water supply you need building control approval. Size depending on your room size but roughly 5kw for a standard room - bigger, say 8kw, and you’ll probably never shut any doors as it will heat the house
We have our wood burner on afternoon/evening most days from late September to late March and burn around £250-worth of wood but our only other heating is the kitchen range so it’s pretty decent value.
We collect kindling in the woods and seashore on our daily walks. If you buy it you’ll spend more !
 




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