Burning Wood To Save On High Diesel Prices. Blaze King Catalytic Wood Stove Model Ashford AF30.2A

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • One Month Update Review
    • Blaze King Catalytic W...

Комментарии • 447

  • @cindystrachan8566
    @cindystrachan8566 Год назад +108

    My brother bought an 80 acre woods and built his house to be heated with wood. People predicted he’d have to cut down every tree to do it. 50 years later the woods is thicker and healthier than at purchase because he cuts only the damaged, diseased or dead trees, which makes the others healthier. And for kindling etc he uses the fallen branches. He avoids pine because it deposits a lot of creosote in the chimney, and prefers hardwoods because they burn slower hotter and longer. Wood heat feels great. Enjoy!

    • @davecalvo6418
      @davecalvo6418 Год назад +11

      Cindy, the rule of thumb is you can take 1 cord of wood off one acre a year for ten years and not damage the property. I have been burning wood all my life and I will never change

    • @brahtrumpwonbigly7309
      @brahtrumpwonbigly7309 Год назад +9

      Yep. People don't seem to understand wood heat lol. We lived on 80 acres when I was young and we used probably 2.5-3.5 cords a year for two woodstoves. You could have never noticed. We got most the wood from a neighbor's property because he was trying to clear some land but we barely made a dent in 3 years.

    • @beeenn649
      @beeenn649 Год назад +4

      @@davecalvo6418
      Dead on agree with that.

    • @southlakelife
      @southlakelife Год назад +1

      Creosote build up is temperature dependant. As long as the flue is maintained at a high temp, moisture can not condense on the inside of the flue and cause a build-up. Burn it hot enough and you'll have no problems. I've been doing it for over 25 years.

    • @amorales9613
      @amorales9613 Год назад

      Imagine if everyone heated their homes this way. There would be a lot of air pollution. It's not sustainable. Also, so called dead wood is habitat for critters in The ecosystem.

  • @notcardlinsytaccount1355
    @notcardlinsytaccount1355 Год назад +62

    My grandparent’s old home had no central heat, and they used a wood-burning stove to heat their house. It would get so cold that they’d just block off openings to other rooms. When that old house got bulldozed the stove was one of the many things we salvaged from it. Now it sits comfortably in their garage.

    • @kathydoyle9939
      @kathydoyle9939 Год назад +6

      Our furnace is too small; we close our attic/front porch doors to keep the living room warm. The furnace still works. Knock-on-wood. 🤞

    • @HernanieLegaste
      @HernanieLegaste 3 месяца назад

      You can restore it

  • @theswagtech
    @theswagtech Год назад +15

    My uncle had a huge wood stove in the basement with vents in the floor. In mid NC it never stayed cold for a long time but that was his only heat source. In the last few years of his life, he added fans to circulate.

  • @oldpete3153
    @oldpete3153 Год назад +33

    I've been using a Blaze-King for 18 winters...two wrong things mentioned here is the handle on the side is not the damper, it's actually the diverted plate to bypass the catalytic chamber while starting the fire then closed once the catalytic chamber is up to temperature as indicated by the gauge on the stove top. The damper is controlled by the knob just behind the diverted handle. When loading open the diverted plate and partially close the damper to mitigate smoke and embers from coming out the open door. One other point is the stovepipe temperature Guage should be no more than 18 inches above the stove top. These things are fantastic but must be used properly to avoid a tragedy.

    • @CW1116
      @CW1116 Год назад +4

      You are correct. The big lever is the by-pass plate and the plastic knob controls the amount of air allowed into the firebox. The Low-Med.-High knob is a thermostat that is opened and closed by use of a bi-metal strip attached to the inlet 'damper'. I think Blaze King may be the only brand with an automatic thermostat control. "Set it and forget it."

    • @ghilreese3413
      @ghilreese3413 Год назад +1

      That's right. Blaze King King owner.

    • @davemi00
      @davemi00 Год назад +1

      Thanks for the info.

    • @dannybetts6929
      @dannybetts6929 Год назад +1

      Mmmm!! When's din din😁

    • @johnparkhurst825
      @johnparkhurst825 Год назад +2

      @@CW1116 back in the 70's there was a woodstove called Ashley, it had a thermostat. It may be related to Blaze King.

  • @cronk6879
    @cronk6879 Год назад +4

    Im not from the country at all, but its truly amazing how much heat these wood stoves can put out.

  • @CodyJames29
    @CodyJames29 Год назад +2

    Great video! I’ve been burning well seasoned pine for years. It’s indigenous to my area and free. The beauty of these new stoves is you control the burn not the density of the wood. I clean my stove pipe in October and inspect it every few months by pulling off the cap and looking down the pipe with a flashlight. No issues or crazy soot everyone claims with pine.

  • @kathydoyle9939
    @kathydoyle9939 Год назад +18

    Thank you for this video!
    Gmpa, BNSF, had heeated his houses with wood until he'd moved to a retirement residence in 2004.
    Gma had kept their electric bill at three dollars/month. (One dim light bulb per room was too dark for me.)
    They'd sometimes used Birch bark to start the wood stoves in their house/cabin. That bark burns longer than paper and cardboard.
    They're both gone; watching your wood stove brought back great memories!
    Merry Christmas! 🎄

  • @blacklotus2983
    @blacklotus2983 Год назад +5

    I've had a Blaze King Princess insert for 3 years or so now. I love it, they are fantastic. I can get overnight burns no issues. Be forewarned when you take the cat out to clean, there's a gasket you'll need to replace when you put it back in. Make sure you have one ready to re-install. The only thing that comes out of my chimney is heat waves, no smoke at all. I used two floor vents, one next to the insert and one at the far end of the house connected with a flex duct with a high flow grow tent fan in the middle. If you do go the route of active circulation, be aware that it is better to push cold air then to try and pull hot air.

  • @arsinowey66
    @arsinowey66 Год назад +6

    We just got a wood stove and we are in love with it as well !!

  • @poolfixer
    @poolfixer Год назад +5

    I have never used my pellet stove as much as I have this year. Agreed, the price of heating oil is shocking. I have a 550-gallon in-ground tank. I cannot stomach paying three thousand dollars to fill it from empty. I still have approximately two hundred gallons left over from last year. I think you made good decisions to try to save some hard-earned coin. Thanks for the video!

  • @pauljones8796
    @pauljones8796 Год назад +4

    I've burnt wood for over 40 years have had a blaze king for 4 years, best stove I've ever owned. The lever you call a damper is the catalytic bypass. Make sure you open it before opening the door as the rush of cold air can damage your converter. The knob controls the air intake and regulates the heat output. You will find the sweet spot and and turn it up or down a little depending on how much heat you need. The gauge on the top of the stove shows the temp of the catalytic converter. You just want to have it in the active zone when you close the bypass. It's not uncommon for it to be pegged out with a new stove, you don't try and regulate the stove temp by it. All it does is show when the cat is hot enough to close the bypass after that you don't care what it reads.

    • @post10Vlogs
      @post10Vlogs  Год назад +3

      Thank you, I always gets concerned when the catalytic thermometer gets all the way to the end because I thought it was overheating while the other gauge says it's good

  • @bobjoncas2814
    @bobjoncas2814 Год назад +4

    ....GOOD IDEA , KEEP WARM AND SAFE

  • @peterlilly8052
    @peterlilly8052 Год назад +14

    This is a great video as always. I have been using a wood stove as supplementary heat for my house for close to 30 years. I do suggest you get an electric log splitter. I've had one for 5 years now and I love it. It requires no maintenance and it makes splitting so easy. Thank you for providing excellent content on your channel.

    • @jimyobbie7226
      @jimyobbie7226 Год назад +1

      we have an electric splitter and it has split everything i put in it never ran out of power and it oly cost 300 bucks works awsume

    • @juliascorey999
      @juliascorey999 8 месяцев назад

      Which brand splitter do you use I'd love to invest in one also

  • @maryannanderson2213
    @maryannanderson2213 Год назад +2

    I love the way a wood burning fire sounds. That crackling is so soothing and can put me to sleep in a matter of minutes. We had a wood burning stove (we called it a "pot-bellied stove") when I was a kid and that was the only heat our house had. The room it sat in (the dining room) was comfortable but the rest of the house stayed cold. We got really good at piling a lot of blankets on our beds to get warm enough that we could sleep. We also had no indoor plumbing so getting up in the middle of the night to go outside to the outhouse was a cold and miserable exercise. Let's say we didn't waste a lot of time doing any lollygagging on our way there or back. We wanted to get back inside and under our covers as quickly as possible. I don't think we kept the fire going all night very often so when we woke up in the morning, we were pretty cold until we could get that stove fired up again. I do NOT miss that part of the "good old days".
    A few days ago the temperature here in Nashville got down to a few degrees below zero (which is EXTREMELY cold for Nashville) and we had a power outage that lasted about 12 hours. My heat is electric and it is amazing how fast my house got seriously cold when the power went out. Remembering how we piled the covers on when I was a kid, I pulled some extra blankets out and surprisingly I got warm enough that I slept quite comfortably. In fact, I slept so well that I didn't wake up until 10 a.m. and my electricity was still off! I was sitting here wondering what I would eat for breakfast because about the only thing I had that didn't need to be baked or microwaved or toasted or heated up in a skillet was peanut butter and crackers. As I was trying to talk myself into believing this would be a great breakfast, at about 10:30 my power came back on. I wish I had owned one of your wood-burning stoves because I was pretty uncomfortable for a few hours. It's amazing how much we depend on our "modern conveniences" ... to the point that when something stops working we sort of don't know what to do... or at least I didn't.
    BTW, I don't know if you have any plans to do any cooking on your wood-burning stove but let me tell you that soup or chili or beans or stew that sits on a stove and slow cooks for hours is the best stuff you will ever put in your mouth. In my opinion there is no comparison, between something that is cooked on a wood burning stove and something that is cooed on an electric or gas range! And if a fire is burning in your stove anyway, you might as well take advantage of that fact to cook something delicious to eat. That's the end of my rant.

    • @post10Vlogs
      @post10Vlogs  Год назад +3

      Yep the past few years just seeing what can happen to the supply chain and how prices can jump so high made me turn into kind of a prepper so I'm ready if anything ever permanently shuts off

    • @Kamika_C_1980
      @Kamika_C_1980 Год назад

      @@post10Vlogs yeah i was thinking about that too and how to handle an emergency situation. we have liquid gas as our primary heat source and it would be nice to have a wood burning stove that can run on low expenses. we bought the house 5 years ago and it's an old house that has been messed with by the previous owners who did various stuff they might have not had the proper expertise about so our chimney is quite worthless to use bc there's all sorts of pipes and plasterboards and whatnot in there, plus there's poor insulation in various spots so in winter it gets quite cold. in our living room (which has 2 radiators) we have an extra mobile electric radiator we put away during summer. i wish things were a tad less difficult...

  • @Project-jf3bz
    @Project-jf3bz Год назад +2

    I’m doing the same. I’ve got a multi fuel stove so can burn coal as well. I brought 50, 25kg bags in the summer, I’ve had it lit constantly since the beginning of October. 1 load of coal lasts all day. Top it up at bed time and stays all night.

  • @tonyg6103
    @tonyg6103 Год назад +8

    Yes, interesting. Good looking stove. Been wanting to get one (an insert) for years to fit into the fireplace. Growing up with one as a kid, we used to put a pot of water on top to up the humidity in the room. A little smoky scent is part of the beauty of having one. Gas powered splitter could be the way to go. I like the manual ones for the workout value. 👍👍

    • @philliphall5198
      @philliphall5198 Год назад

      How much are they ???

    • @tonyg6103
      @tonyg6103 Год назад +1

      @@philliphall5198 I looked on Amazon. Nothing for under $600 USD. You get what you pay for though.

    • @jimyobbie7226
      @jimyobbie7226 Год назад

      get a electric splitter they work great way more power than you expect for about 300 bucks i have had it all been burning wood for 50 yrs

    • @jimyobbie7226
      @jimyobbie7226 Год назад

      get a electric splitter with a built in stand unless you have a heavy duty workbench to place it on you dont want to work off the floor if you are old like me

  • @cheskydivision
    @cheskydivision Год назад +4

    Our farm house had a large would furnace. Remember going to bed in an over heated house but waking up to ice in my drinking glass.

    • @CW1116
      @CW1116 Год назад

      Sounds like my grandma's house from the early 1900's! No insulation in central Minnesota with the only heat coming from a huge kitchen cook stove! The kids (7 of them) slept 3 and 4 to a bed to stay warm under feather quilts. Dad used to tell me about ice in the water glass in the morning. Brrr.

  • @janeevans7567
    @janeevans7567 Год назад +1

    That wood through the window idea is so efficient and pleasing 👍😊

  • @merrilljohn1619
    @merrilljohn1619 Год назад +2

    I bought an HVAC temperature test gun to determine what areas of my wood stove heat up the most. I found the front opening doors are thinner than the side walls or top and they heat up the hottest. I place my round temperature guage on the door to show the hottest temp my stove reaches. Thank you for your video. We all learn from you.

  • @SpaceKid123
    @SpaceKid123 Год назад +1

    I love wood stoves. Its relaxing to watch and the heat is nice and warm.

  • @PilotMcbride
    @PilotMcbride Год назад +1

    Now 67, had a wood fire or heater for all but 10 of my life. We have a wood heater now with fan circulation which is brilliant, we’ve had it for 30 years now and the only maintenance I’ve had to do on it is clean and oil the fan every 2 years. Started splitting with an axe and wedges now just using a hand block splitter or maul, whichever floats your boat. Good exercise, 😂😂.
    If your glass blackens your fire needs more air, most of the black will burn off, but to clean your glass use dampened newspaper dipped in the fire ash rub the glass and then use a moist cloth followed by a dry cloth to polish it. Bloody good stuff. Our glass is 30 years old and still perfect.
    A lot of your resultant heat will be radiated from the flue so the corrugated iron should reflect that as well.
    Keep burning a clean fire and once a month given it a couple of hours flat out burning, that the keep the flue clear, especially if you’re going to burn pine even if it is seasoned. An active fire will also help keep your glass clean.
    With your air coming in over your glass, as much as you can, keep a bed of white ash, what I do is dig ours out 2 or 3 times a year, leaving at least an inch covering, by just moving the charcoal from side to side. Any black stuff removed is removing fuel and efficiency from your heater.
    Keep an eye on your chimney top because excessive smoke is loss of efficiency and pisses off any close by neighbours.
    If you can avoid it, don’t burn a lot of bark, it is loaded with tannins.
    Enjoy your fire, but it should have been place where you can see it. Nothing as calming as watching a fire, 😂. Our kids loved it, now our grandkids can’t watch it enough.
    Thanks for posting Post.
    All the best for the season to you and yours from me and mine. 👋👋👋 🎄🎄

  • @KLiNoTweet
    @KLiNoTweet Год назад +1

    I can feel the warmth already 😊

  • @CatherineC.2123
    @CatherineC.2123 Год назад +5

    You should get a cast iron kettle shaped like a train or a dragon to put humidity into the air.

  • @stardust-rv7mr
    @stardust-rv7mr Год назад +1

    i have four sores of heat, propane high efficiency, electric radiant heaters that i use with my solar, during the day when i am producing enough electricity, a pellet stove, and also a wood stove, i switch back and force between the cheapest sores during each day. and your right a wood stove is truly a go to for backup heat when there is no reliable electricity. and a electric log splitter works great with the small logs that you are splitting.

  • @thisZelse
    @thisZelse Год назад +6

    Great as always! Love your explanations of the rationale and everything. It's interesting they mentioned using a blowtorch to get the chimney running; I've seen in older Russian masonry stoves, they often have a hatch in the chimney about 4-6 feet up with a small grating in it, the idea being you start a small fire in the chimney deliberately to warm it up, start the draw, and "pop" the cork of cold air and stop the room filling with smoke. It's an interesting little solution to the problem (I'm guessing it's safe because of how masonry stoves are by their nature more or less nonflammable).

  • @Ganiscol
    @Ganiscol Год назад +2

    I have an old fashioned brick fireplace that is open on two sides (but was enclosed in glass a decade ago) in addition to central heating and I love it in my living room because its just such a cozy warmth coming off of it. 😌 And its really reassuring to have backup heating in case central heating goes cold.

  • @FriggOff361
    @FriggOff361 Год назад +10

    i use a wood stove too! Good work. Love your channel

  • @nanomaine
    @nanomaine Год назад +3

    That, is an excellent heating choice! A Blaze King, is exactly what I am considering. A long burn time, and great efficiency - is highly desireable.
    I also use the same type of wood cart; I can roll it right into the room with the current wood cook stove.
    I will definately look for your future, new stove update - thank you!

    • @post10Vlogs
      @post10Vlogs  Год назад +4

      I only made this video a 4 days ago and I have not shut it off since, I'm amazed at how little wood it's actually using and the furnace hasn't turned on at all even with some pretty cold nights, it appears by the ash buildup I'll have to shut it down once every 10 to 14 days to clean it out

    • @nanomaine
      @nanomaine Год назад +1

      @@post10Vlogs 10-14 days, that's amazing! My wood Cookstove will only run about 4 hours, if I stuff it full. Then, dump the ashpan, every day. You made a great choice!

    • @safffff1000
      @safffff1000 Год назад +2

      @@post10Vlogs I'll confirm that, I just got my Blaze King Princess 32 3 weeks ago also and have gone 15 days till I cleaned the ash out, and if you clean when the cat temp. needle is in the middle and save the glowing coals you just reload it and keep going. The temp. of the stone will stay constant for 95% of the burn then start going down.
      But it was over 6k for everything

  • @carle5538
    @carle5538 Год назад +1

    Great video. We have an oil burner and a fireplace. It gets expensive to just use heating oil. A wood stove is the only solution. You made a good presentation of these great stoves. Thank you.

  • @jandblawncare8570
    @jandblawncare8570 Год назад +2

    This is probably the best video Ive seen on wood stoves and their operation! We just put in a Lopi stove with the re-burn tubes and catalytic converter and still getting the hang of it. The way Lopi wants us to get it started and shut the top damper at 500 F so the catalytic converter starts to work seems to smother out the fire so then we keep the lower air inlet wide open and doesnt seem to make a difference in the size of the fire. We used to hear the roar of the fire when it got going but that only seem to last a week or so. Long story short we're following what you did and look at our manual temp gauges and control it that way and see how it goes. Thanks for sharing!

    • @denverbasshead
      @denverbasshead 11 месяцев назад

      What model Lopi do you have? I got the evergreen with just the tubes, no catalytic

    • @jandblawncare8570
      @jandblawncare8570 11 месяцев назад

      @@denverbasshead Lopi Rockport

  • @fredb1973
    @fredb1973 Год назад +3

    That's what I love about your channels, a good variety and always learn something.Keep up the great job Post and Happy Holidays 👍🎄

  • @TheZarlo
    @TheZarlo Год назад +2

    keep a kettle full of water on top of it. that will help with the air getting to dry

  • @simonworthington5162
    @simonworthington5162 Год назад +2

    Dam that was a good investment and free fuel. Interesting video indeed

  • @jeromeprzybilla9999
    @jeromeprzybilla9999 Год назад +2

    Excellent video and beautiful wood stove! We used to have a wood stove then later, installed a wood furnace in our basement. In 2000, I installed an outdoor wood boiler which made it so much easier with loading it up and storing the wood outside. After 22 years, I now miss having a wood furnace in the basement. There are pros and cons about using both indoor wood heating appliance vs an outdoor wood boiler. Mostly, it was nice to go down into the basement with the temps being in the 80's throughout the basement with the concrete floor warm to the touch.

  • @tlind7299
    @tlind7299 Год назад

    Mmmm, I love the sound of fire crackling and drafting good! I live in a central heated apartment complex, but my childhood home had huge wood-heated masonry stoves. I miss the feeling of sitting with my back leaned against the hot masonry

  • @dannybetts6929
    @dannybetts6929 Год назад +1

    I bought a home and put in a wood stove in it and it was the best!! Investment I ever did to that home!😁👍

  • @trevorgrimes7273
    @trevorgrimes7273 Год назад +3

    Trevor from England I’m sure a big sharp axe would be less effort and a lot cheaper than that splitter .Have a warm and happy Christmas

  • @ricj7517
    @ricj7517 Год назад

    My sister and husband have a cold stove keeps their house warm and toasty..I have a small one in my apartment..I love it!

  • @marlinnotfish
    @marlinnotfish Год назад +1

    Great video, I feel your pain with these crazy fuel oil prices. I have two 275 gallon fuel oil tanks and this September I filled them from 1/4 tank to full. Costed me around $1500 at 4.07 a gallon. I have a pellet stove I use to curb the fuel consumption like your doing. I really enjoyed this video, that’s a beautiful stove you got there! Good luck!

  • @deborahcaldwell9775
    @deborahcaldwell9775 Год назад

    I purchased my first all-by-myself house four ago. It had a wonderful bluestone wood stove inserted into the fireplace and I use it instead of the oil furnace back up and the gas back up because it’s cheaper and because it’s friendlier and because it works. It heats the entire house without electricity which has😢 not been a problem yet but it could be. I love it. Thanks for this. It was interesting in case I change houses, because I didn’t start with the new stove. (This was well-established and efficient.)
    Because the stove and Chimney are in the center of this craftsman house, it heats the center of the house, so that none of the pipes will ever freeze. As long as the stove is working on end fired up. The bathroom is upstairs. The kitchen is behind the chimney on the first floor, and the washing machine and dryer and outside spigots are in the cellar underneath the stove. It’s well placed I must say.

  • @VickyGeagan
    @VickyGeagan Год назад +6

    Post Ten, just a FYI you can move both of the handles of your logsplitter at he same time. One of the handles is for fast speed splitting and the other is for slow speed splitting.

    • @ku7p
      @ku7p Год назад +1

      Is he not clearly using both hands? And may humbly suggest using a axe.

  • @mornaslocum8376
    @mornaslocum8376 Год назад

    👋 Best heaters for keeping your home warm on a cold day, had one for years 🔥👍🇦🇺

  • @thomasmccardle725
    @thomasmccardle725 Год назад

    I think all your content is very interesting, you are definitely one of my favorite content providers! Please stay safe and Keep Well!!

  • @mdocod
    @mdocod 10 месяцев назад +1

    The aspen may not have high BTU content per unit volume, but it's still free heat, and it's very clean burning wood that would be well suited to heating in the "shoulder" of the heating season. It also has a sort of unique smell when burned that some people like. I would happily burn aspen!

  • @user-dt9md9gt8d
    @user-dt9md9gt8d Год назад +1

    I had a similar set-up many years ago. You don't have to cut a hole in the ceiling. Just set the box fan on the floor at the top of the stairs pointed down into the basement. You will get more than adequate circulation of heated air.

  • @ryambler
    @ryambler Год назад

    'Hope this video's interesting, thanks for watching' is not only a genuine statement, but it also works as a subtle, classy reminder to hit that Like button.

  • @stellamaggard3669
    @stellamaggard3669 Год назад

    That's is such a nice wood stove. My family, had one way back in the 80's. It wasn't that nice. One time my Mom put way to much wood in it. And made it super hot. It was huffing and puffing. She didn't know much about them. What a great way to heat your house.

  • @spacejunkjen
    @spacejunkjen Год назад

    Makes me happy to live in the south.Those dollar figures are nuts.

  • @alaskacanoe6837
    @alaskacanoe6837 11 месяцев назад

    Enjoyed your wood stove video and operation. Appreciate your pragmatic ocd . You have a lot of energy on your property. I live in Alaska and I see $ in your resource.. just the sale of a few loads of firewood would fund a new splitter …

    • @post10Vlogs
      @post10Vlogs  11 месяцев назад

      Most of my firewood is evergreen, nobody would want to buy it except for a campfire, I buy some of my own wood to mix in with the low quality stuff

  • @myuncle2
    @myuncle2 Год назад

    really happy for you, and that splitter, wow

  • @christinemiller7238
    @christinemiller7238 Год назад

    I love my wood stove. You get to be an expert on what to set everything at.

  • @420bin7
    @420bin7 Год назад

    I own a blaze king for my house and princes in my garage for about 5 years now and I have cut my wood down in half. Next to no carbon build up in chimney, the usual on my cap but as long as u do the start up procedure and burn seasoned wood these stoves rock. I'd never run household wast through it though.

  • @vickiwood9192
    @vickiwood9192 Год назад

    My family had wood stoves when I was growing up. They were great for warming your backside on a cold day! We cooked pots of soup and beans on the top. My uncle would roast peanuts for us on top of the stove. Hope you have good luck with yours.

  • @Dignityclouds
    @Dignityclouds Год назад

    We heat in NY with a Lopi Endeavor. We’ve never bought wood, always had it given to us from storms or people who wanted their trees removed.

  • @123gonow
    @123gonow Год назад +1

    Wait till big brother changes his mind on wood burners ! It’s starting to happen again in Washington state. Come on man you want full electric says the big guy 😂 Nice burner been at it for 35 years it’s great exercise and the $ savings help at the grocery store. At $6-7 a gallon for oil you should have your $ back faster then 4 years. Have fun !

    • @post10Vlogs
      @post10Vlogs  Год назад +1

      If everyone had to switch to Electric it would cripple the grid and cause blackouts at the moment. Electric is also the most expensive heating in the area unless it's a heat pump which is extremely expensive to install

  • @nakamuraiwao
    @nakamuraiwao Год назад +1

    It is always interesting to see what Post10 have in his basement. No spiders, frogs or beavers however.

  • @southlakelife
    @southlakelife Год назад

    Great video man! Love the new stove. We're dealing with propane prices over $3.00 / gallon. I'm so thankfull for our geothermal as our primary heat source.

  • @PurpleCollarLife
    @PurpleCollarLife Год назад +2

    We've heated our house with a catalytic wood burner for 22 years. (Several videos about it on our channel if you'd like to check them out.). There is no substitute for wood heat. And if you can process your own firewood - it's highly efficient (but a lot of work). Great video!

    • @kylemccourt663
      @kylemccourt663 Год назад +1

      My catalytic stove is a dual fuel and I can with certainty say that coal is quite the better substitute. It may not be cheaper than free but holds way more BTUs per pound. One load burns for 24 hours compared to 12 with wood, not to mention the heat throughout the entire firing cycle is wayyyyyyyy more even. No wild fluctuations like wood. But free is the best if you are going by cost....

    • @PurpleCollarLife
      @PurpleCollarLife Год назад

      @@kylemccourt663 Very interesting! Thanks! I’ve never tried heating with coal.

  • @DrissDaniel-rn1qc
    @DrissDaniel-rn1qc 6 месяцев назад

    I like your lifestyle. I wish I could do that. Im Stuck in the concrete jungle for 56 years. As soon as I can retire, I’m out tho!

  • @matthewbbenton
    @matthewbbenton Год назад +2

    Your neighbor is like a modern-day lord of the manor. When collecting firewood, medieval peasants were only allowed to collect branches that had already fallen to the ground.

  • @bigskunk801
    @bigskunk801 Год назад

    Good idea getting the woodstove. In my experience. With a modern EPA app. Stove. The key to it’s efficiency is making sure the gases are burning. In order for that to happen a flame has to reach the gas burning area. Then you will see the blue flames. After that it can stay lit but will go out without a flame to relight it won’t be burning gases. At some point When wood is burnt to embers and coals there’s no gases to burn. Operation of stove on low setting while keeping the gases burning is key for a clean, efficient all night burn. Smoldering a woodstove is dangerous as is wet wood. Soot will soon clog your catalyst, chimney, chimney cap. With my Pacific Energy stove. A normal load is 2 pieces of wood like a half log split in half. Set wood flat part down and leave about 1/2 in. Crack in the middle. The flames will go up through it. The bigger the pieces the hotter it will burn.

  • @funkyk
    @funkyk Год назад +1

    Very cool! I'm hope it keeps your place warm and cozy

  • @TC-bz9dz
    @TC-bz9dz Год назад +3

    you should put this on your main channel....very interesting video

  • @mikehill9050
    @mikehill9050 Год назад

    Man at the end of the season you're going to be a beast that's a lot of work

  • @presspound7358
    @presspound7358 Год назад

    If that’s bottled water in the corner…I would definitely move that to a cooler place. Nice stove and super clean basement 👍

  • @bayside6207
    @bayside6207 Год назад

    Great idea for the indoor wood storage.

  • @yvetteha7818
    @yvetteha7818 Год назад

    I came across your channel your vidio camping in the big truck i injoyed the vidio you put a wood burning stove i hope u keep wooking on the truck

    • @yvetteha7818
      @yvetteha7818 Год назад

      I hope u work on the truck.. Like wood floor's sink bathroom.. It be cool

  • @alwaysasleep
    @alwaysasleep Год назад +3

    Beautiful stove. Fun video.

  • @junkjournalmama8826
    @junkjournalmama8826 Год назад

    Very interesting, thank you for sharing! I love glimpses into your life.

  • @robertlovesdogs4824
    @robertlovesdogs4824 Год назад

    That was interesting. Keep us updated on how it keeps your house warm looks like a nice wood burner

  • @UndernetSystems
    @UndernetSystems Год назад

    I hope this stove provides you with many warm nights mr post

  • @HDDynalowrider
    @HDDynalowrider Год назад

    I have burned wood for last 4 to 5 years..best thing I have ever done was putting my stove in. I have never bought wood. It literally grows on trees. I used to burn 300 gallons per winter and having the peace of mind you have heat without power is priceless. Yes you can burn pine..Just keep your stove pipe clean..be smart and keep it clean

  • @coreyriley7160
    @coreyriley7160 Год назад

    Good morning. Thank you for the great content. Some early morning cannabis vape and coffee make this video a good start to the day. I have a Pacific Energy stove in Minnesota and it does 90% of our heating. We have a small fan pointed towards the stove to spread the heat out of the area and to the rest of our house.

  • @YardworkWithJohn
    @YardworkWithJohn Год назад

    I have an outside fireplace just for recreational use and I've had some really sketchy moments burning pine lumber. 2x4's pop a lot even when they've been drying in the house for 50 years. And I've had some thin stuff, think broken down wooden pallet type wood, but covered in really old sap and it burned thick black like a car fire! That's just for fun, I don't heat my home with it.

  • @cherylsibson2529
    @cherylsibson2529 Год назад

    they have a product to clear the piping from creosote maybe do that once in the spring, then once again in the fall. They have upgraded the wood stoves since I had one. Good for you Post.

  • @markw2266
    @markw2266 Год назад

    You have a good stove. My friend just bought a blaze king and we are amazed at how little wood it uses. As for splitting get yourself a Stihl splitting axe. That will do most of your splitting and get you in shape as well. I have 3 hydraulic splitters and still split by hand occasionally just for exercise. You will be surprised at how much you can split if you stay at it 20-30 minutes at a time.

    • @safffff1000
      @safffff1000 Год назад

      Not on black jack oat, power splitter much easier

  • @426superbee4
    @426superbee4 Год назад

    I made a heat exchanger for my fireplace, to get more heat. The pipe is heated by the fire, and i put a adjustable fan into the pipe at 3 difference speeds as the pipe is heated the hot air goes around into the pipe and out of front of the pipe with bunches of hole out into the room. Now its 50% efficent

  • @rat8356
    @rat8356 Год назад

    i got my first catalytic stove this year and am loving it..the whole idea about the cat is to use less wood and i load my stove and run it on low and let the cat put off the heat..the temp gauge on the pipe i like to run as cool as possible, the hotter it is the more heat you are wasting out the chimney..the cat will keep the creosote from building in the chinmey because it burns all the smoke up so ignore the words on that upper temp gauge since its a generic thats used for all stoves..the combustion air draft will not really effect the cat temp, once the cat is glowing it feeds its self off of the smoke from the fire and the slower you burn the wood the more smoke the wood puts off and the hotter the cat will get, so in effect the cat will burn cooler if you burn the fire hotter because the hot fire burns up its own smoke stealing it from the cat if that makes sense..im burner about half or a little more less of wood with this stove compared to my old stove!..the reason i got it is because firewood sellers are price gouging the crap out of firewood buyers this year..its ridiculous what they are charging for their under seasoned and under sized loads of wood!!

  • @kirkanos3968
    @kirkanos3968 Год назад

    Wish i was closer have soo many darn maples been dropping a few a year. Miss having my fires but last few years smoke and dyer sheets and well just soo many smells make me sick from a headache to loss of motor skills to memory loss. PSA be very careful leaving the door cracked like that to get it to burn better. My dad did that on Christmas morning and forgot to shut it again and somehow started the house ablaze didn't lose the house but wasn't a great Christmas

  •  Год назад +1

    That's really nice looking stove. Here in Finland we use much our nordic birch for firewood, but also pine, spruce, alder and aspen too. It's not that horrible for firewood. Many use it here to heat up their smokesauna. Though, I'm not sure if the aspen here are different than those u got there in the US. But anyways, great video and have a nice holidays and happy new year!

    • @davemi00
      @davemi00 Год назад

      Our Aspen and Poplar are pretty much similar type trees and probably the same as yours.

  • @TobiEstosWorld
    @TobiEstosWorld Год назад +1

    Awesome stove, love it!

  • @freddypflugbeil6
    @freddypflugbeil6 Год назад

    Thanks Post 10. From New York

  • @horatio_
    @horatio_ Год назад

    Im here to wrangle the HATERS who are giving post10 (second channel) heat over the positioning of his oven.
    Post10 don’t let the opinionated folks dampen your video. Love the video dude glad it made it to the main channel

  • @keyboardwarrior9199
    @keyboardwarrior9199 Год назад

    Wow what a cool neighbour

  • @stevesmith8854
    @stevesmith8854 Год назад

    I just found this second channel...yea!

  • @FriggOff361
    @FriggOff361 Год назад +5

    i did the hole in the floor and the natural convection was alot faster than a fan, But i hope it works for you!

  • @MotSter
    @MotSter Год назад +1

    That video.. "was interesting". Thanks

  • @Recoheat
    @Recoheat Год назад

    Have you tried using an upside-down fire when lighting the stove? Should get the heat going up the flue faster and create a good draw to stop the smoke from coming back into the room.

  • @marleneverdecchio6343
    @marleneverdecchio6343 Год назад

    If it ever gets on fire the water when it melts will help douse the fire.
    Beautiful stove.

  • @freedomfab319
    @freedomfab319 Год назад +4

    20" box fan blowing on it would double the heat output.

  • @bananabob2185
    @bananabob2185 Год назад

    That was fun to watch… and informative, as always!

  • @patrickkozlowski8273
    @patrickkozlowski8273 Год назад

    i burn wood with a wood stove and to me is the best yeat source ....i love it

  • @jeffkenyon483
    @jeffkenyon483 Год назад +1

    That’s excellent,but the problem with these high efficiency stoves is you have to have wood dried to at least 22 % wood moisture,therefore you need to cut wood this season for next season,or following season,and the wood needs to be zero wetness. You need to get a wood moisture sensor.

    • @lisacrule
      @lisacrule Год назад

      As a kid, my dad had us stack at least a cord of wood in the basement to help dry it and keep it dry

  • @cherylyargeau4422
    @cherylyargeau4422 Год назад

    Wow. Love your new wood stove Post. Very beautiful looking😍

  • @aldiminico6513
    @aldiminico6513 Год назад

    I bought a Boss 7 Ton Electric Splitter 3 years ago , at our local Home Center, for about $300. I know the price has gone up, but a great investment. I can use it in my shed all year long, rain, snow or shine. Good luck🪵👍

    • @post10Vlogs
      @post10Vlogs  Год назад +1

      Thank you, I was afraid they wouldn't work very well so maybe I'll try something like that

  • @matthewkirichkow5279
    @matthewkirichkow5279 Год назад +1

    I start my fires with a couple ounces of charcoal lighter fluid on the kindling to get a fast heat going for the flue. You might want to move the combustibles away from the stove as well.

  • @TNT580
    @TNT580 Год назад +1

    I like the stove. My only concern is that some of the objects around the stove appear to be too close. could be the camera but 3 feet is a good rule.

    • @post10Vlogs
      @post10Vlogs  Год назад +1

      The stove has been running non-stop since I have installed it and nothing around it is heating up the stove company saw everything around it and the code in the state is 18 in

  • @rodgerholland2803
    @rodgerholland2803 Год назад

    Now that you have fired the stove you should read the owners manual that came with the stove. Start around page 20. Blaze King does a great job on how to operate the stove.
    I would love to see another video after you have burnt it for a month or so.

    • @rodgerholland2803
      @rodgerholland2803 Год назад

      Also, nice job talking about the tax credit. the tax credit has now been renewed till 2032 and raise to 30%. unfortunately they put a $2,000 cap on it which only works out to about a $6,500 purchase. there has been legislation introduced in Congress to raise that backup to $8,000 cap.
      this would be a much more realistic number.

    • @post.10
      @post.10 Год назад

      @@rodgerholland2803 8,000 is more realistic for anyone looking to get a stove, the smaller rebate is only good if you're making a replacement

  • @christhornley1664
    @christhornley1664 Год назад

    Very interesting video, thanks. The way energy prices are going, people all over the world are going to have to go back to old school methods for heating and cooking. In a way, this could be a good thing, people in general have become far too complacent and wasteful with their energy hungry life styles. This is all going to have to change now.
    I love the wood burning stove, I could just sit and watch the flames for hours. You'll be able to cook and boil water on top of it too.

  • @jameshundley8725
    @jameshundley8725 Год назад

    Smoking that's why it's a good idea to set up outside with your interior piping and do a burn off. Doesn't matter if it's new or old/ simple wood stove or a wood cooking stove always do a burn off outside. So many videos out there and all of them make this mistake. Quarter day or half day burn will help you learn to use / operate safely before entering your house