I rent a couple of teenage boys from the neighbor. They stack, too, but you have to watch them or they get sloppy.
Gas for heat - wood for sipping a drink outside - don’t know brand of maul - have two plus wedges …You guys can burn wood for heat? I gotta move!
With an ax.I usually use a Husky brand 8.5 lb maul with a go devil 4 way splitting wedge. Works great unless wood has more than 3 knots in it. Great all around workout.
I have a 14 seer heat pump for the whole house. It puts out heat down to about 30. Then it runs all the time with its heat grids kicking in. My house has a large great room with a wall of windows looking out over the pond. It will keep the temperature in the house but you don’t feel warm. The original heat pump(2007) was worse. So I installed the wood boiler. The odd thing is that 72 degrees from the wood boiler is much more comfortable than 72 from the heat pump. It does blow hot air.Makes sense wood is cheap if you have woods
Propane is $$$$$$
natural gas not always available.
and electric is terrible for heat until heat pump recently.
Discounting the large initial outlay heat pump beats pellet stove until 0f or so.
which may vary with prices locally.
Of course 5k buys alot of pellets
It would be interesting to see how a medium size stand alone heat pump would work in a situation like that.
Maybe a 2 zone or 2 smaller 1 zone.
We have a new heat pump and propane. You say propane is $$$$$$. I say it's more like $$$ in a dual fuel system.Makes sense wood is cheap if you have woods
Propane is $$$$$$
natural gas not always available.
and electric is terrible for heat until heat pump recently.
Discounting the large initial outlay heat pump beats pellet stove until 0f or so.
which may vary with prices locally.
Of course 5k buys alot of pellets
It would be interesting to see how a medium size stand alone heat pump would work in a situation like that.
Maybe a 2 zone or 2 smaller 1 zone.
Depends. For us yeah, it was cheaper to run the natural gas furnace than it was to have wood delivered to the house, most of the time…. But no power means no furnace. The wood stove would burn as long as you kept it fueled and was capable of getting the house to 90F if you wanted too. We mostly used the wood stove as a supplement to the furnace most of the time to reduce the gas bill during cold snaps. IIRC we got a “cord” (8’x4’x4’) of hard wood for $300 delivered but not split.Idiot question from a suburbia guy: what do people use firewood for? Isn't central heating more cost-effective?
If you are buying split wood delivered then often the fuel cost is more with a wood stove, especially in suburbia. Natural gas is cheap!
Compared to propane or electricity sometimes wood can win, even delivered, depending on your location.
Most of the wood we burn is from our land, or from urban friends who get a tree taken down, so its kind of free, and I'm still using the same saw, Atv, and trailer that we got 23 years ago.
Our wood stove and chimney was about $3k installed 20 years ago, and maintenance has been $50 in fire brick and a $30 in new rope seals. I inspect and clean the chimney every year, and that's about it. If we had a gas furnace it would be due for replacement soon, plus actually buying propane for it every year....
We have an open concept house and the wood stove does all the living areas pretty well, so it is our central heating for most of the winter. If you want to have a warmer bedroom, leave the door open a crack, or a bit colder, close the door, or a lot cooler, crack open the window a little... And if the power goes out, nothing really changes.
True my comment was based on only using propane for heat. Friend was doing that it cost about $500 to 600 a monthWe have a new heat pump and propane. You say propane is $$$$$$. I say it's more like $$$ in a dual fuel system.
I thought it would be a sweet savings. I am amazed at the energy synergy - funny part? I just wanted some AC in the summer. Hahahahaa!True my comment was based on only using propane for heat. Friend was doing that it cost about $500 to 600 a month
Small house.
BiL had a hardwood that died and unfortunately the smaller fire sized wood was rotted …Lengthwise
Firewood is for when the power goes out and the Heat Pump isn't working. It never gets very cold here but 36 hours without power or heat (like happened a few years ago) isn't good. Our house had a good wood stove and a woodshed we keep them to mitigate the risk of a prolonged power outage. The wood stove keeps the family room and kitchen nice and toasty and keeps the rest of the house from freezing.Idiot question from a suburbia guy: what do people use firewood for? Isn't central heating more cost-effective?
Indeed - when the power is on - things around you are making heat doing what they do - then its all gone …Firewood is for when the power goes out and the Heat Pump isn't working. It never gets very cold here but 36 hours without power or heat (like happened a few years ago) isn't good. Our house had a good wood stove and a woodshed we keep them to mitigate the risk of a prolonged power outage. The wood stove keeps the family room and kitchen nice and toasty and keeps the rest of the house from freezing.
To answer the original question, I use a big maul (weight unknown). I used to use an axe but splitting wood with that was a real work out.
Just remember with wood you have ash and creosote buildup so that has to be handled or chimney fire which is scary.I thought it would be a sweet savings. I am amazed at the energy synergy - funny part? I just wanted some AC in the summer. Hahahahaa!
Seriously want to replace the mostly decorative LP fireplace (Ok it heats and does have a blower, but....) with wood or pellets. The heck are my options? Is there a good starting place?? Quotes? DIY??
Yes, I've had fireplaces before. I actually don't want that.Just remember with wood you have ash and creosote buildup so that has to be handled or chimney fire which is scary.
Was it a real fireplace that was converted to Gas or never a "real" fireplace?
Wondering what a good splitting wedge you folks would recommend. Thank You.