How to Light an Anthracite Coal Fire

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2024

Комментарии • 65

  • @ccovingtoniii
    @ccovingtoniii Год назад +4

    Growing up a city kid who just bought a home w/ an anthracite coal furnace I NEEDED to discover this video. I was doing so much wrong, but was on the right path.
    Thanks so much!

  • @andrewseamans1419
    @andrewseamans1419 Год назад +5

    We've been heating with Chubby Coal Stoves in my family since the 70's. The owner is a great guy! Awesome customer service and made locally to us in Massachusetts.

  • @jondo9919
    @jondo9919 Год назад +7

    I lived with my grandparents in East TN during my high school years. One of my chores was to maintain the coal stove we used for heat. I kept the coal buckets and kindling boxes filled at all times as well as the ashes dumped. I remember it well. Nice informative vid.

  • @danr1920
    @danr1920 Год назад +4

    As a boy in Wisconsin, about 10-12 years old, I found a piece of coal, anthracite. It was nice piece, nice and black and shiny. On day I thought I wanted to set it on fire. I broke off a piece the size of a quarter. First just using a match. No luck. I then used a propane torch. Still no luck. This is what we did in the 70's when parents were at work! I did it out side, not in the house.

    • @MrAstronus
      @MrAstronus 3 месяца назад

      I took GP11 apart (it's a 7.52 mm rifle cartridge used in swiss military), collected the powder in a tin and oh boy, that was easily set on fire. Have done this at my grandmothers house, she opened the window exactly when I set all on fire, looked at me, and closed the window without a word 😂

  • @funkyprepper
    @funkyprepper 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for the tips. Just trying it out on mine. When hot and going well. Open bottom a small bit and close the top. Thank you

  • @terryshrives8322
    @terryshrives8322 9 месяцев назад +2

    I saw your Dad demonstrate this stove. I really like it.

  • @raymondlang
    @raymondlang Год назад +3

    Great video!!
    I have a TRIANCO TRG-45 and having major problems getting it to light now, and am thinking it could be the fan that need renewing.
    It's a sealed air tight hopper.
    Been using this model since they came out in the 1980s.
    I will try this way though before I call an engineer.
    The way the manual shows how to light it, is fill the gravity fed boiler with anthracite, shove as far up into the bed a couple of firelighters, leave door hatch at bottom open a few minutes, then close it, and turn fan on.
    Then it's fingers crossed!
    I live in England.

    • @Rick-S-6063
      @Rick-S-6063 Год назад +2

      My dad was from the north of England and he often spoke well of the coal burning stoves and fireplaces in his youth.

  • @matthaft2048
    @matthaft2048 5 месяцев назад +2

    Match light charcoal works really well too

  • @davidmurray9844
    @davidmurray9844 Год назад +6

    Very educational thank you for sharing.

  • @drmstack
    @drmstack Месяц назад

    Changed to Anthracite this winter. Thank you for this video. My attempts were hit and miss. I am expecting much more heat from this smoke free coal vs the artifical ovoids. Ovoids burn pretty but pretty dont heat the house.

  • @DDR2127
    @DDR2127 Год назад +1

    great video...I asked and you delivered...Love your channel keep up the awesome job,,,Dan

  • @16B9
    @16B9 Год назад +1

    Very informative video. Thank you for taking the time to make it. :)

  • @bobbliss9607
    @bobbliss9607 Год назад +1

    have a question about the heat that's produced by the Chubby coal stove. Is the heat produced and circulated, produced by a fan blowing across the burning coal, OR, is heat
    circulated by a fan that blows in a heat exchanger - heat box built in the stove that the coal
    warms up? Thank you.

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +1

      The second one. Two rectangular steel tubes run through the top of the combustion chamber. They get heated, and the fan blows air through them.

  • @wascalywabbit
    @wascalywabbit Год назад

    I have either a salesman sample or a large child's toy,(spark stove),but either way,it works wonderfully with little chunks of wood 2x3 inches..
    I'm wondering if it would be OK to start a fire with something like Kingsford charcoal and then stoke it up from there

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +1

      I’ve personally never tried that but if understand correctly you’re wondering about using a charcoal fire to ignite hardwood. I can’t see why that wouldn’t work. If you’re wondering about burning anthracite coal though, it won’t burn in your stove. It needs a specially built stove made for anthracite.

  • @chrisdaniel1339
    @chrisdaniel1339 8 месяцев назад +1

    Why have a barometric damper and a plate damper in the flue pipe, I would think the plate damper is plenty to slow down the burn and not allow too much draft which would increase your coal consumption?

  • @josephdelp87
    @josephdelp87 Год назад +2

    What does a ton of coal go for vs cord of hard wood.

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +1

      Depends where you are and whether or not you buy coal in bulk. I paid about $450 per ton of coal including delivery. Around here equivalent amount of ready-to-burn hardwood would be slightly less than twice that price.

  • @rickyamsbaugh7397
    @rickyamsbaugh7397 11 месяцев назад

    Is there a reason that the pot is made round than square like now a days. And is the pot wider at the top than the bottom

  • @philipcooper8297
    @philipcooper8297 Месяц назад

    If you have a huge heat source, switch to a stove with a heat exchanger to use the heat around the house.

  • @tinman1955
    @tinman1955 9 месяцев назад

    Do coal stoves have secondary burn tubes like modern wood stoves?

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  9 месяцев назад

      Doesn’t need them. Anthracite burns fully the first time.

  • @raymonddelisle6601
    @raymonddelisle6601 Год назад

    Thanks for posting

  • @andrewmeitner4818
    @andrewmeitner4818 Год назад +1

    How much does the coal cost per bag? Thanks

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +6

      Depends on dealer prices in your area. I bought directly from the mine in Pennsylvania which involved a big payment up front to buy 20 tons at once, but a pretty good price of about $6.50 per 40 lb bag (almost 2 days worth of heat in my case) including shipping.

    • @andrewmeitner4818
      @andrewmeitner4818 Год назад +1

      @@cabininthewoods517 Thanks. I love your channel!

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +2

      @@andrewmeitner4818 Really appreciate that!

    • @kevinbeaupre8925
      @kevinbeaupre8925 11 месяцев назад +1

      I just bought a 50lbs bag from. Tractor supply for like $12

  • @bonnie3030
    @bonnie3030 Год назад

    Excellent

  • @michaelowens944
    @michaelowens944 Год назад

    Where do you buy the coal

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +3

      I bought directly from the mine in Pennsylvania which involved a big payment up front to buy 20 tons at once, but a pretty good price of about $6.50 per 40 lb bag (almost 2 days worth of heat in my case) including shipping.

    • @anastasiabee3843
      @anastasiabee3843 7 месяцев назад

      @@cabininthewoods517is the 20 tons what you use in a winter season?

  • @AltonBriggs-pt2mn
    @AltonBriggs-pt2mn Месяц назад

    Aren't your washer and dryer going to be damaged by that 700° stove right next to it?

    • @Thedeadbeetsband
      @Thedeadbeetsband 24 дня назад

      That’s an electric stove lol what made you think that was a washer?

    • @AltonBriggs-pt2mn
      @AltonBriggs-pt2mn 24 дня назад

      @Thedeadbeetsband My bad 😞 I was just thinking of the effect of the heat on the outer finish on that appliance.

  • @xavier22g97
    @xavier22g97 5 месяцев назад

    How much in Rands

  • @btx5740
    @btx5740 Год назад +1

    Did he just say he lights his stove in Dec and it doesn’t go out till April

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +2

      I did!

    • @SwarleySwablu
      @SwarleySwablu Год назад

      @@cabininthewoods517 So how do you keep it burning for so long? Like when do we need to put in more coal? How much coal is needed for 4 months?

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +5

      @@SwarleySwablu I fill and service it once a day. Here in Canada I burn about ninety 40 lb bags per winter (about 5 months).

    • @ackack612
      @ackack612 Год назад

      ​​@@cabininthewoods517 so your 20 tons should last you over 11 YEARS(!), at approximately $590.00 (Canadian or US $$?) per year, at that rate of burn...Yes? WOW, you are making one GARGANTUAN bet on heating with coal dollars vs oil or gas or wood. Honestly, I would have to question the fiscal sanity of tying up all that dough for so very long. I hope it works out for you. Your balls are a lot bigger than mine! WHOA DOGGIES!

    • @RelaxedPuppy
      @RelaxedPuppy 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@cabininthewoods517 About two tons then?

  • @bonnie3030
    @bonnie3030 Год назад +1

    Why is your stove special is it made with different steal or whatever can you not burn your coal in say a regular wood stove for some reason

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +9

      Anthracite won’t burn in a regular wood stove. It needs a stove with a shakeable grate for shaking down ash and vent-controlled airspace underneath to create bottom to top draft. It also needs a barometric damper in the stove pipe to keep the burn from
      getting too fast and hot.

    • @bonnie3030
      @bonnie3030 Год назад +1

      @@cabininthewoods517 very interesting thankyou.

    • @dks13827
      @dks13827 Год назад +1

      steel

    • @Rick-S-6063
      @Rick-S-6063 Год назад

      @@dks13827 Some scavengers steal steel and sell it at unscrupulous scrapyards. ;)

  • @MrAstronus
    @MrAstronus 3 месяца назад +1

    When I look at this guy, he does make the coal himself by pressing wood together with his bare hands, right?

  • @nikeflight17
    @nikeflight17 Год назад

    You can just use rubbing alcohol to light the coals if you want to save $$.

    • @cabininthewoods517
      @cabininthewoods517  Год назад +3

      You mean the wood? Yes, that would work fine too. Definitely wouldn’t work to light the anthracite directly though.

    • @nikeflight17
      @nikeflight17 Год назад

      @@cabininthewoods517 Try it on the anthracite too; let me know your results.