My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Join our Property forum for renovation, DIY, and house selling advice.

Property/DIY

Please tell me everything you know about wood burning stoves...

36 replies

Fillybuster · 04/01/2017 00:14

...especially the stuff you never thought to ask before you got one...?

Open fire isn't an option sadly cos DH has ruled it out but he's up for a wood burning stove in the living room (currently midway through building work) We don't have an existing fire place to squish it into, so can be quite creative with size, style etc.

Any chance of recommendations for suppliers, or style, and any advice at all on just about anything stove related, please? Thank you!

OP posts:
Report
tittysprinkles · 05/01/2017 08:23

We also got a fireguard from these people. Not cheap but really sturdy, looks great and worth every penny. The front doesn't get hot but the heat still gets out iyswim. We have a 1 year old and a 4 year old so safety around the fire is really important.

Report
Trethew · 05/01/2017 09:41

debmeister a word of caution here. Gas 'woodburners' come in all shapes and sizes, including models that do not need external venting which means the exhaust gases come into the room, same as with a hob. These stoves have catalytic converters which can fail without warning and allow carbon monoxide into the room. Carbon monoxide detectors are essential.

Report
Trethew · 05/01/2017 09:48

First reply from lucasgrahamfan says it all.

I've had a Villager and a Clearview in previous houses. Now have a tiny Aga woodburner. Clearview wins hands down. Current house is converted stone building with no chimney. Flue goes through living room ceiling, bedroom ceiling and out the roof. Bedroom really warm and currently building airing cupboard into the corner to incorporate the flue which has a metal cage around it

Report
LumelaMme · 05/01/2017 09:56

Another vote for Clearview - best wood stove ever.

The glass either stays clean or (if the stove was badly loaded) will clean itself during the next burn. Ours will stay hot with just one or two logs in it, turned down low. Never have much problem making it draw however damp and still and cold it is outside (just light a sheet of newspaper and that warms the flue).

It churns out a ludicrous amount of heat from half a dozen logs and some kindling: that much will warm a large and rather draughty room for well over an hour, probably two.

I only clean it out when the ashcan overflows, because as everyone knows, wood burns best on a bed of ash.

Report
MummaB2016 · 05/01/2017 15:28

We've fitted a Charnwood and love it! My uncle is a stove fitted (HETAS) and recommends them so we went with it. It's simple in style and they come in different colours, we got a light grey one as I wanted something a bit different.

One thing we had to consider was the lintel height. We didn't really want the hassle of moving it, but we put an oak beam mantle (eBay) over the fireplace and it has to be a certain distance from the woodburner. Ours falls just under the regulation stated in our stove user guide but uncle said it was OK. If you do need to put it closer than the recommended you can get heat reflector plates to protect your mantle/wall.

When you've got it I also highly recommend a stove fan that you place on top and it moves the warm air around the room more efficiently. It really makes a difference! Ours was a gift from MIL but definitely wasn't £100. I reckon closer to £30/£40. They are on Groupon a lot too.

Good logs are also key! Don't buy any old rubbish going cheap on Facebook. We pay on average about £75 for a tonne bag. You need well seasoned logs. We built a log store for free out of some old crates that I collected and it looks and works great!

You'll need to buy a Carbon monoxide alarm and fit it in the room where the stove is. The installer shouldn't certify it unless they have seen that you have one.

Finally, don't forget to account for the fact that you'll need to get the chimney swept - annually ideally.

Report
lljkk · 05/01/2017 20:25

DH made our stove protector gate, bit of grills & drilling & hooks.

Report
specialsubject · 06/01/2017 11:10

Regarding kids - the stove and glass get very hot, that is the point. If you have kids young enough to dance round the room you must have a secure guard. The burns from falling on it (even though you can't fall into the fire) would be horrific.

Report
Fillybuster · 06/01/2017 19:05

Thanks for all the replies and info - it's been really helpful. DH is very keen on the Stovax range (anyone have any experience of these?) but we've massively reduced the size we are looking at installing after all the comments about heat!

Full disclosure: we are installing it as a fun extra in a house with central heating, so it's mainly about the fun element and the look rather than practicality Blush

OP posts:
Report
LumelaMme · 06/01/2017 19:58

Yeah, but when it's a bit chilly and you don't want the central heating on, or your boiler breaks, or there is a power cut, your wood stove will really come into its own!

Report
Outinthegarden · 06/01/2017 20:08

We have a Chillipenguin stove, their Hungry Penguin. It is a 5kw multi fuel stove with a little oven built in and a hot plate; in our 3 bed house it heats so well our thermostat regulated heating rarely comes on. It is very easy to regulate and burns very little fuel. When you go to the show rooms to look at stoves you will notice how light some of them are, you want a good heavy one that has good quality steel, careful of poorly made ones from recycled metals. Happy burning!

Report
misson · 06/01/2017 23:09

Before deciding the size of stove, check the volume of the room you need to heat. We have big stoves but we need it. I know people who fitted small neat stoves, which don't heat their rooms properly.

HETAS fitter.

Clear view or woodwarm stoves.

Love our stoves.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.