Hey Joe, if you remove the center screw from the existing receptacle then plug in your four receptacle adapter then use a longer 8/32 screw to go all the way through your adapter it will never fall out again! The hole in you 4way adapter lines up with the existing screw hole for that reason and you won't have to worry about it any longer! Then at the end of the cold season all you need to do is unplug your pumps and leave the light plugged in! P.S. not positive on the screw size it may be a 6/32 or a 8/32 screw but make sure it's long enough to pass through the adapter into the original receptacle behind it enough to secure it! 1 1/2 to 2 inches long I believe! Good luck and I love your channel! Keep the videos coming Brother!
Not boring! I have watched dozens of wood furnace videos. This is the most comprehensive overview of these types of systems. This should be a million view video. Your insight and experience is invaluable to understanding if a wood furnace is right for someone. Thank you.
Awesome Stuff. The center hole on the multi-plug is used to secure it to the receptical through the plate. It would never fall out again. Glad the boiler is working out..
This was not boring at all. Thinking of getting a wood boiler to heat our home, garage/shop and greenhouse when we build our new place and this video was super valuable! Thank you
Thank you for breaking it down for those of us who have absolutely no clue how those things work. I was always curious watching you use it this past winter but figured you'd explain it one day after you got it set the way you wanted. Have a great weekend, Joe!
Hey Joe. Put a two gang box in with two receptacles. Or stack them for further growth. Lowes/Home Depot readily available. Great video, you do a great job as an instructor. Stay warm!
I really enjoy when you do stuff with wood heat. The reason I found your channel was when I was researching heating my house with wood, this will be our 3rd full winter.
Did not see this in the comments, but, Using different wood types. When heating our cabin in the early fall or late spring I can burn Pine. In the winter have to use hard wood (Elm, Oak, Ash) to get better burn times and heat quantity. Our cabin is wood heat only so getting good burn time is important. As my dad would say, wood heats you 4 times. Once when you cut it, once when you stack it, once when you burn it, and finally once when you clean up! Love your video, Thinking of putting a boiler in here! Thank You.
I found myself leaning back in my chair and holding my breath at times watching this. It reminded of cleaning out the two Vermont Castings wood stoves I had in my North Carolina house. Using the unburned wood chunks for the grill is a good idea! You've given me an idea for my own charcoal grill on the back porch here at my house in Delaware....that's after I make sure the Carolina Wrens have moved out of the nest they built in my hibachi.
See i know others would say the same thing. Lol. I use those multi boxes too and that center screw is a game changer ! Great video and thanks for the review of the wood boiler ! Take care Joe
Your green jacket is fine. Nothing a few strips of duct tape couldn't mend. Thanks for the explanation. I am glad to hear how much you've saved. You sure worked hard for that savings but that's what keeps you alive. We have a wood stove in our big three story house and it gets so hot in here. I like when I can figure out the ratio of different woods to get an even heat. Some burn so hot as you know. We only use a few chords and once got five cords of clean fence post tops from a lumber yard for $15 a chord. I missed Beauty in this vid😊
Great video Joe, i am really impressed with your explaining everything I've been a plumber for over 50 years and couldn't explain it like you can. Heads up to you Joe great job. Bernie from Canada 🇨🇦 🇩🇪
Very informative video! I have no need for one but I just like to know how things work. Besides, I'm addicted to your channels. Yes, insulation always helps!
May I suggest that next time you clean out the boiler you do so wearing a dust mask, and not just a cheap paper one but a proper one with a separate cartridge. Ashes, and in particular fly ash are very hazardous as they get in your lungs. Leaving the ashes in the boiler might cause premature rust damage as the ashes can trap moisture creating a corrosive reaction with metals. That can be avoided by cleaning out the boiler right after it has cooled down. PS. I don't have a boiler so check your manual as to the cleaning out. I just have seen other RUclipsrs do it the way I suggested. They also checked the water quality in the boiler by sending a sample to the lab or supplier, to check if some conditioner/buffer needed to be added to prevent corrosion. But I think not all of them had to do that annually.
that is correct. you really need to clean the boiler out after it cools. its easier and the flue as well. been using one for 20 years and ash is very corrosive and it collects moisture when the boiler is not burning.
Thanks for the video, very informative. Never boring, always into some interesting to watch. So much better content than the crap on TV! I appreciate you sharing with us.
My suggestion is to start at the top in cleaning up(down) with the stack, upper area, ashes, and then the pan. That way everything falls by gravity and you only need to pull the ash pan once. I did that with our chimney and our wood stove.
Thanks for sharing about your experiences with the boiler after the long season use Joe. Looks good and kept you all warm through the harsh winter we watched you folks get. I am impressed with how good it worked . Stay safe and good luck with everything in you heating and hot water systems through many more seasons. Keep up the good videos. Fred.
- The plug that came loose last year, consider a spring across the plug. Not a tight spring but enough pressure to keep secure. Almost like a rubber band. You likely have a spare spring in your hardware supply. No worries about heat distortion. - Your jacket reminded me of my old winter jacket. Torn and tattered but still an old fav you don’t want to give up.
Liked the drawing showing how that boiler works. I wondered how much you had to clean the ash through the winter also. Looking forward to the Tent Deer season vids! Good luck!
I see you are still at 100k subs so I guess not too many people unsubbed bc of this video ha ha. Thank you for the review of the wood boiler. I'm planning on getting a boiler for my place in Alaska.
@@NorthernSeclusion that's great Joe! I gained 300+ last weekend from doing a live with another channel and videos from a couple homestead visits. I just got monitized bc of it.
In the center of your adapter. There is a screw hole. Remove the center screw on the cover plate of your receptical. Plug in your adapter. Use a longer screw, and screw down the adapter. To the receptical, that will hold the adapter in the receptical. Just a thought, Joe Capo.
That was an excellent explanation! It may burn better with a taller chimney and coupled with the more seasoned wood this year those afterburner pipes in the firebox should be more efficient. Depending of course on the weather you may consume less wood this year. 👍
Wood ashes are good in several places! My grandparents put them on their garden, they're good on the walkways and harden up,i really tried to save some to put on steps,porch, and walkways,drive in winter on snow a ice because it melts ice,gives good traction better than anything!!!
Hey man, great video. I am looking at buying that exact brand. Maybe a bit smaller, the 7300MP. Very informative video. Love what you are doing. Keep iy up buddy.
We had a Jenson wood boiler for years and had our oil furnace hooked in series to take over when we weren't around....the gizmo you were trying to explain that register the water temp to initiate the furnace is called an aquastat, ran that system for years until we moved... during the day south facing Dutch stayed comfortable, then fired up boiler at night, had enough heat and hot water for the next day....PS I never left the ashes in all summer, felt they were acidic and wanted them out, just sayin'
If you take the screw out of the middle of ur out let then plug ur 6 way plug in u put a longer screw in the middle of that 6 way it cant come unplugged..good luck & god bless
Great video's and enjoy watching them. Noticed one thing you could probably make and that's a adjustable wide slide that instead of picking up one log or chunk of wood and walking it into your wood shed over and over, you could stand in one place and slide or roll the wood into the wood shed. Load as much wood as you want to. then go into the woodshed and stack. Repeat until done or filled to your satisfaction. Design is of course up to you, but I would start with a right angle triangle for the basic shape, with the adjustable slide Shute as long as you need. Just a thought, up to you again.
Roses love ashes, should you have any. My mom pulled hers throu the -30 degrees that prevail in a western Quebec winter and fed them the wood ash she got from natural (untreated) wood. They were her delight and cause for neighbours' envy.
Joe you talked about charcoal,did you think about putting your ashes on the garden,my dad did this every year and had a great veg patch.I watch Lunmah acres they have the same boiler.
Joeford Charcoal . Everything burns. One year in the Adirondacks at hunting camp we burned a log that came out of the lake. It was so wet it was sunk along the shore. Get a good hot bed of coals and feed a little at a time and it burns
Time to upgrade that duplex to a quadplex. Replace the metal faceplate and and have 4 outlets instead of the two. eliminating the need for the BS adapter. Its a simple upgrade. Perfectly safe. RUclips has many qualified electricians showing how to do that particular thing. Costs about $10-20 for a quality upgrade. It would be worth that for piece of mind to me.
Heck I live in the south and still wish I had a boiler like this for our home. I've only seen one garage in my old subdivision that the guy did radiant floor heating. Everyone that moved into that house couldn't figure out what the pipes were floor. Then they would complain that they never could use it in the winter. Lol
Quarter the rounds and stack, for a year. Paint the roof shed metal Black so sun will heat the shed up durring the warm months to help dry out the wood. When you see ray type cracks in the face of the wood and a gray colored look it's ready to use.
I forgot to mention you can install a larger recepticle box and install more outlets without much ado. Those plastic-y add on 6 way one's are prone to burning open inside leaving you with no heat. Probable take a few minutes to do that then have a melt down with that 6 way.
Hey Joe, if you remove the center screw from the existing receptacle then plug in your four receptacle adapter then use a longer 8/32 screw to go all the way through your adapter it will never fall out again! The hole in you 4way adapter lines up with the existing screw hole for that reason and you won't have to worry about it any longer! Then at the end of the cold season all you need to do is unplug your pumps and leave the light plugged in! P.S. not positive on the screw size it may be a 6/32 or a 8/32 screw but make sure it's long enough to pass through the adapter into the original receptacle behind it enough to secure it! 1 1/2 to 2 inches long I believe! Good luck and I love your channel! Keep the videos coming Brother!
Your right. My experience has been that the 4 way receptacle comes with a screw to keep it plugged in.
Also agree, been an electrician for 37 years
Good video Joe, good luck with your surgery, and all your projects you have going on
Exactly true Joe. Try it.
6/32
Not boring! I have watched dozens of wood furnace videos. This is the most comprehensive overview of these types of systems. This should be a million view video. Your insight and experience is invaluable to understanding if a wood furnace is right for someone. Thank you.
Awesome Stuff.
The center hole on the multi-plug is used to secure it to the receptical through the plate. It would never fall out again.
Glad the boiler is working out..
Exactly what I was thinking to say. Might need a longer screw like I did.
This was not boring at all. Thinking of getting a wood boiler to heat our home, garage/shop and greenhouse when we build our new place and this video was super valuable! Thank you
Thank you for breaking it down for those of us who have absolutely no clue how those things work. I was always curious watching you use it this past winter but figured you'd explain it one day after you got it set the way you wanted. Have a great weekend, Joe!
Hey Joe. Put a two gang box in with two receptacles. Or stack them for further growth. Lowes/Home Depot readily available. Great video, you do a great job as an instructor. Stay warm!
I really enjoy when you do stuff with wood heat. The reason I found your channel was when I was researching heating my house with wood, this will be our 3rd full winter.
NOT boring! I was hanging on every word. That thing makes my wood stove look like a kid's toy. You won't regret building that shed!
Like the video .I am not going to be getting one but I had a few questions that you answered.
Thanks . not boring.
Did not see this in the comments, but, Using different wood types. When heating our cabin in the early fall or late spring I can burn Pine. In the winter have to use hard wood (Elm, Oak, Ash) to get better burn times and heat quantity. Our cabin is wood heat only so getting good burn time is important. As my dad would say, wood heats you 4 times. Once when you cut it, once when you stack it, once when you burn it, and finally once when you clean up! Love your video, Thinking of putting a boiler in here! Thank You.
You could talk about raindrops falling or wind blowing and it would be interestng because your explanations are well eplained. Keep up the good work
Joe, your videos are never boring!
Your videos are never boring. So glad that your happy with it! Thank you for sharing!
Awesome Video Joe. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks Joe I’m not thinking of getting a boiler but your explanation was very easy to understand 👍
I never miss a video, Joe. Great coverage on the CR 7400MP Boiler.
I found myself leaning back in my chair and holding my breath at times watching this. It reminded of cleaning out the two Vermont Castings wood stoves I had in my North Carolina house. Using the unburned wood chunks for the grill is a good idea! You've given me an idea for my own charcoal grill on the back porch here at my house in Delaware....that's after I make sure the Carolina Wrens have moved out of the nest they built in my hibachi.
LOL!
Awesome video as usual Joe the way you explain how things work is just what You want to hear. I’d love one of these systems myself
It wasn’t boring. Very informative for those that are interested or just curious.
See i know others would say the same thing. Lol. I use those multi boxes too and that center screw is a game changer ! Great video and thanks for the review of the wood boiler ! Take care Joe
Your green jacket is fine. Nothing a few strips of duct tape couldn't mend. Thanks for the explanation. I am glad to hear how much you've saved. You sure worked hard for that savings but that's what keeps you alive. We have a wood stove in our big three story house and it gets so hot in here. I like when I can figure out the ratio of different woods to get an even heat. Some burn so hot as you know. We only use a few chords and once got five cords of clean fence post tops from a lumber yard for $15 a chord. I missed Beauty in this vid😊
This was an awesome video. I had questions.... you answered them. Thanks bud!!
Great video Joe, i am really impressed with your explaining everything I've been a plumber for over 50 years and couldn't explain it like you can. Heads up to you Joe great job.
Bernie from Canada 🇨🇦 🇩🇪
Very informative video! I have no need for one but I just like to know how things work. Besides, I'm addicted to your channels. Yes, insulation always helps!
May I suggest that next time you clean out the boiler you do so wearing a dust mask, and not just a cheap paper one but a proper one with a separate cartridge. Ashes, and in particular fly ash are very hazardous as they get in your lungs. Leaving the ashes in the boiler might cause premature rust damage as the ashes can trap moisture creating a corrosive reaction with metals. That can be avoided by cleaning out the boiler right after it has cooled down.
PS. I don't have a boiler so check your manual as to the cleaning out. I just have seen other RUclipsrs do it the way I suggested. They also checked the water quality in the boiler by sending a sample to the lab or supplier, to check if some conditioner/buffer needed to be added to prevent corrosion. But I think not all of them had to do that annually.
that is correct. you really need to clean the boiler out after it cools. its easier and the flue as well. been using one for 20 years and ash is very corrosive and it collects moisture when the boiler is not burning.
He mentioned that about checking the water quality and sending his in this year.
@@bullofthewoods9374 Plus he can spread the ash in his garden just before he tills it in late Spring.
@@robertdendooven7258 yep
Definitely not a boring video. Thanks Joe! You do a great job explaining. Good luck deer hunting! 🦌
Really enjoyed watching 👍👍
Hey Joe , great explanation take care
I love that you can make your own charcoal💥
Thanks for the video, very informative. Never boring, always into some interesting to watch. So much better content than the crap on TV! I appreciate you sharing with us.
always wondered if these work. sounds like it does . good video and explanation Joe. stay safe.
Amazing how it heats the house, workshop and guest house.
Boiler 101 - really enjoyed. Not boring.
First off I would like to say Congratulations 🎉100k Subs Joe totally awesome you deserve it
Great video very informative. Thank you for sharing
Awesome video Joe I have a Heat More out door furnace for 23 years and still going. Few things little different but anyway good luck with yours Joe 🍁👍
Hello everyone from goderich ontario Canada 🇨🇦
Thanks Joe if you weren’t talking about it, then there would be questions so why not! 👏👏👏🤩🤩🤩💯💯💯
Congratz on 100k you deserve it!!!
He's hit way over that on his other channel
Enjoyed this video very informative for me
Very informative Mr. Joe🙂I had wondered about those labor/costs tradeoff details. Way to go!
Isn't that hole in the center of that multi-plug for screwing into the ang box?
My suggestion is to start at the top in cleaning up(down) with the stack, upper area, ashes, and then the pan. That way everything falls by gravity and you only need to pull the ash pan once. I did that with our chimney and our wood stove.
Thanks for the video watching from Reno NV
Good job keep up the good work!!
Informative for people interested in boilers. I have a different model from same company (and dealer). I love mine.
Thanks for sharing about your experiences with the boiler after the long season use Joe. Looks good and kept you all warm through the harsh winter we watched you folks get. I am impressed with how good it worked . Stay safe and good luck with everything in you heating and hot water systems through many more seasons. Keep up the good videos. Fred.
Great video. Very interesting. Watched you for years. Keep up the great work
- The plug that came loose last year, consider a spring across the plug. Not a tight spring but enough pressure to keep secure. Almost like a rubber band. You likely have a spare spring in your hardware supply. No worries about heat distortion.
- Your jacket reminded me of my old winter jacket. Torn and tattered but still an old fav you don’t want to give up.
There is a whole in the middle for a screw
Like a hose spring that stops your hose from buckling on itself. 😊
For Halloween video. Use the shot of the ash falling from above into main box and superimpose your face behind the falling ash. Perfect spooky video.
Liked the drawing showing how that boiler works. I wondered how much you had to clean the ash through the winter also. Looking forward to the Tent Deer season vids! Good luck!
Awesome video as always
I see you are still at 100k subs so I guess not too many people unsubbed bc of this video ha ha. Thank you for the review of the wood boiler. I'm planning on getting a boiler for my place in Alaska.
Actually, the subs are going crazy. Almost 350 in the last month.
@@NorthernSeclusion that's great Joe! I gained 300+ last weekend from doing a live with another channel and videos from a couple homestead visits. I just got monitized bc of it.
Congratulations on 100k
love every video you guys!!
I was curious how it worked being a Floridian. Thanks for the class👍
In the center of your adapter. There is a screw hole. Remove the center screw on the cover plate of your receptical. Plug in your adapter. Use a longer screw, and screw down the adapter. To the receptical, that will hold the adapter in the receptical. Just a thought, Joe Capo.
That center hole is the provision for the screw to hold in the receptacle.
That was an excellent explanation! It may burn better with a taller chimney and coupled with the more seasoned wood this year those afterburner pipes in the firebox should be more efficient. Depending of course on the weather you may consume less wood this year. 👍
Congrats for 100000🎉
Great information!! Thanks for sharing, Joe!
Wood ashes are good in several places! My grandparents put them on their garden, they're good on the walkways and harden up,i really tried to save some to put on steps,porch, and walkways,drive in winter on snow a ice because it melts ice,gives good traction better than anything!!!
Great video!
Thank you for your video. The info is very useful.
Good video as always. Congrats on 100K subs, you get your Silver Button. Great accomplishment.
Those ashes would be great for the garden
In the next video you will see them get dumped on the compost pile.
Thanks, never understood how the wood boiler worked.
Hey man, great video. I am looking at buying that exact brand. Maybe a bit smaller, the 7300MP. Very informative video. Love what you are doing. Keep iy up buddy.
Watching your video. Looking to get more information on how your furnace/ heat exchanger works.
We had a Jenson wood boiler for years and had our oil furnace hooked in series to take over when we weren't around....the gizmo you were trying to explain that register the water temp to initiate the furnace is called an aquastat, ran that system for years until we moved... during the day south facing Dutch stayed comfortable, then fired up boiler at night, had enough heat and hot water for the next day....PS I never left the ashes in all summer, felt they were acidic and wanted them out, just sayin'
Joe, The garden is a great place to spread those ashes!
Looking GOODDDD!
If I am not mistaken you can take the center screw out of your plug cover and use it on that center hole on your plug in told hold it in place.
If you take the screw out of the middle of ur out let then plug ur 6 way plug in u put a longer screw in the middle of that 6 way it cant come unplugged..good luck & god bless
Not boring at all I’ve been wondering about your thoughts about the boiler
Seems like way too much work so glad we are on NG
hope you kept that ash you scooped out joe has a lot of useful things you can use it for
Great video's and enjoy watching them. Noticed one thing you could probably make and that's a adjustable wide slide that instead of picking up one log or chunk of wood and walking it into your wood shed over and over, you could stand in one place and slide or roll the wood into the wood shed. Load as much wood as you want to. then go into the woodshed and stack. Repeat until done or filled to your satisfaction. Design is of course up to you, but I would start with a right angle triangle for the basic shape, with the adjustable slide Shute as long as you need. Just a thought, up to you again.
Roses love ashes, should you have any. My mom pulled hers throu the -30 degrees that prevail in a western Quebec winter and fed them the wood ash she got from natural (untreated) wood. They were her delight and cause for neighbours' envy.
Joe you talked about charcoal,did you think about putting your ashes on the garden,my dad did this every year and had a great veg patch.I watch Lunmah acres they have the same boiler.
Hey Joe put that ash on your lawn and garden. Pure potash. Good for the soil.
Congratulations on hitting 100 thousand Joe but you need to buy beauty something I think she helped Lolololololololololol ❤
Joe, that center hole of the 6 way is so you can screw it into the outlet and hold it in
You save the ash RIGHT!? Chickens love to roll around in + its great for the garden.
I put it on the compost pile. You will see that in the next farmhouse video.
Get a quad raised cover for the existing box. Easy fix.
This was a cure for insomnia!
I knew you would love a boiler . I hope my 2 cents help you on picking witch one to buy .
joe your after market plug in has a screw hole in the middle ,you to remove the one under it ,they come with screw with it
When I first saw CROWN ROYAL I thought maybe you were going to have a little Nip.
Joe just place 2 receptacle’s side by side in that box they make a metal cover for a two gang box , no need for that cheap adapter, stay warm !
Good luck video Jim Ross 😮😊😊
Joe, how ya fixed for spuds. I see the shop table and work bench's are full. Winter is right around the corner!
We should be good for a couple weeks. Lol.
Joeford Charcoal . Everything burns. One year in the Adirondacks at hunting camp we burned a log that came out of the lake. It was so wet it was sunk along the shore. Get a good hot bed of coals and feed a little at a time and it burns
That's why there's supposed to be a screw in the middle of that outlet extension.
I got a lot of that hardwood lump from my stove last year from burning unseasoned wood.
Time to upgrade that duplex to a quadplex. Replace the metal faceplate and and have 4 outlets instead of the two. eliminating the need for the BS adapter. Its a simple upgrade. Perfectly safe. RUclips has many qualified electricians showing how to do that particular thing. Costs about $10-20 for a quality upgrade. It would be worth that for piece of mind to me.
🥱🥱Boiler mechanics. 🤣Just kidding!! Not something we use in Florida but still interesting to hear what our northern cousins deal with.
Heck I live in the south and still wish I had a boiler like this for our home. I've only seen one garage in my old subdivision that the guy did radiant floor heating. Everyone that moved into that house couldn't figure out what the pipes were floor. Then they would complain that they never could use it in the winter. Lol
Quarter the rounds and stack, for a year. Paint the roof shed metal Black so sun will heat the shed up durring the warm months to help dry out the wood. When you see ray type cracks in the face of the wood and a gray colored look it's ready to use.
Enjoyed 👍
I forgot to mention you can install a larger recepticle box and install more outlets without much ado. Those plastic-y add on 6 way one's are prone to burning open inside leaving you with no heat. Probable take a few minutes to do that then have a melt down with that 6 way.
Joe use a double duplex crown cover. You are currently using a single duplex crown cover.