I have an old Wood Doctor outdoor wood furnace. I burn 10 bush cord just for a 2000sq/ft house! Will definitely be looking at a Heatmaster when mine quits working.
I'm looking at a G4000 to either put on a slab near my shop or put in place of the woodstove in my shop. I'd heat my house and run a line to my shop while 'i'm at it. I go through about 4 cord or so a year just for the house. I also thought about hooking up solar hot water to the system and utilize the thermopex since I have so much roof area on my shop. Still debating on what I want to do.
The G series boiler do have a bypass handle that can be engaged to turn the fan on and pull the smoke out of the fire box while you are loading the boiler
Ryan...thank you for video......was considering putting a building around my outdoor boiler....after my first year of using the outdoor boiler...I'm concerned with how much smoke comes out of the boiler when loading..... that you wouldn't be able to be in the building....and issues ?
Our G series boilers are rated for indoor installation. If you open the smoke bypass and crack the door open for 30 seconds you should have very minimal smoke in your building.
I've never seen anything like this. How does it get the heat to the house and all the shops? Does this also heat your water? Do you pipe that all the way to the house hot?
Our boiler systems can heat multiple buildings and domestic hot water. The boiler has a water jacket that surrounds the fire box. When wood is burnt it heats the surrounding water. This water is then pumping into your home through underground water lines. The water lines are then connected with your existing heating systems using heat exchangers. I will link a video detailing the process: heatmasterss.com/2022/04/01/how-an-outdoor-wood-furnace-heats-your-home-animation/
I have an old Wood Doctor outdoor wood furnace. I burn 10 bush cord just for a 2000sq/ft house! Will definitely be looking at a Heatmaster when mine quits working.
I'm looking at a G4000 to either put on a slab near my shop or put in place of the woodstove in my shop. I'd heat my house and run a line to my shop while 'i'm at it. I go through about 4 cord or so a year just for the house. I also thought about hooking up solar hot water to the system and utilize the thermopex since I have so much roof area on my shop. Still debating on what I want to do.
Hey @Thestevedie, If you could send me an email to marketing@heatmasterss.com I will connect you to our sales team.
I'm curious how much wood you went through 2021- 2022 Winter Being so cold and all.
Awesome setup ! Only thing I see missing is a extractor fan for the smoke
The G series boiler do have a bypass handle that can be engaged to turn the fan on and pull the smoke out of the fire box while you are loading the boiler
Ryan...thank you for video......was considering putting a building around my outdoor boiler....after my first year of using the outdoor boiler...I'm concerned with how much smoke comes out of the boiler when loading..... that you wouldn't be able to be in the building....and issues ?
Our G series boilers are rated for indoor installation. If you open the smoke bypass and crack the door open for 30 seconds you should have very minimal smoke in your building.
Thanks for showing your experience so far. Did you install the furnace yourself?
Thanks for the info this was helpful.
I've never seen anything like this. How does it get the heat to the house and all the shops?
Does this also heat your water? Do you pipe that all the way to the house hot?
Our boiler systems can heat multiple buildings and domestic hot water. The boiler has a water jacket that surrounds the fire box. When wood is burnt it heats the surrounding water. This water is then pumping into your home through underground water lines. The water lines are then connected with your existing heating systems using heat exchangers. I will link a video detailing the process: heatmasterss.com/2022/04/01/how-an-outdoor-wood-furnace-heats-your-home-animation/
Great video good information
Excellent video. Thank you
Glad you liked it!
Thanks for the good video.
It's not a "gasifier", it's a boiler. Deceiving title