To me, one of the wonderful things about burning wood is the simplicity. Other than a good stove, a chimney (that is serviceable) and seasoned wood there is freedom. Friggin circuit boards and whatever?!? What a step backward.
I am buying more aged/seasoned as I get older but still dicing, splitting and stacking. When I go to the farm store the parking lot is FILLED with pallets of pellets. That is one thing but the issue of circuit boards and input power is another. Wow. If you don't have power you get cold.
I do use power for the woodburner: a box fan and a thermostat trigger. If power fails we still stay warm even in zombie times. But it gets hot upstairs. Pellet stoves.... they don't even have the ambience.
Hmm...seems like the argument is on your part. Couldn't figure out your point from yesterday.
I relied on a wood fire for 40 years or so. You're preaching to the choir.
Stove heated the house when I was home, but I worked and couldn't tend to it 24/7.
Was burning 12-16 face cords of northeast hardwood firewood (3 +/- cords in the western US).
Also burned about 1,000 gallons of fuel oil for heat and hot water. Most of the fuel oil use was because I wasn't there to tend to the stove.
In 2007 or 2008, my pre-buy fuel oil bill for the house was almost $5,000 for 1,000 gallons.
Never thought I would pull my wood stove out, but I did in favor of a pellet stove that vents through the wood stove chimney.
Pellet stove paid for itself the first year I put it in
After putting in the pellet stove, my annual fuel oil use eventually dropped to 20 gallons/year. House was/is 76 degrees F 24/7, which also heated the upstairs to 66 degrees F. Fine for bedrooms.
While pellet costs have increased, I can heat the house for ~$1,600. My fuel bill the other day was $78, and I think that was for 2 years.
Pellet stove uses 300W when running. Can easily accommodate with a generator in a power outage. I have a 12kW unit now that runs the house, although I do have to hook it up manually.
Looked up your location:
Wahkiacus, WA Weather averages
MonthHigh / Low(°F)
January43° / 32°
February47° / 33°
March55° / 37°
April62° / 41°
May70° / 47°
June77° / 52°
July86° / 57°
August86° / 57°
September79° / 51°
October66° / 43°
November50° / 37°
December43° / 32°
If I had those kinds of temperatures, wood heat would work great.
No offense, but that's not cold weather......
You're seldom at risk of even freezing pipes....try -15 F with a stiff wind....
A few years ago, our AVERAGE temperature for the MONTH of February was 9 degrees.
The pellet stove kept up. The wood stove wouldn't have kept up, unless I didn't work nor sleep.
I'll replace the occasional circuit board gladly. Whether you like it or not I don’t care.
What works for you works for you.
What works for me works for me.
Certainly no argument on my part.
Best wishes.