If this year will be anything like the last 62 I suspect it'll turn colder before we begin to see warm weather again.
My goal this year was to complete the following....for heating anyway
- Rebuild the chimney - Complete
- Line it with a SupaFlu pour in liner - Complete
- Find a very small cast iron wood stove - Complete
- Scrounge enough free wood for the season - Complete
Chimney
The chimney was straight forward and finished up quite nicely. Its inside dimension was about 12" square which now has a 6" hole right up through its center. At the minimum, the new liner is 3" thick, from opening to the corner is about 6" and the beauty is it's once continuous piece...It's somewhat expensive but I'll never have to worry about functionality or safety ever again.
Woodstove
This was quite challenging as I wanted one small enough to fit in a particular place and take no longer than a 12" log. I did find a couple of new ones but at $1500 these folks were playing with it.
I stopped by an antique store and while rummaging around I saw an old woodstove. It was cast iron and it's exterior was slightly rusty in spots. It was as if water had dripped on it so the rust was very light.
What I did discover was this was a wood & coal stove. I opened the door and believe it or not it hadn't ever been used. The firebrick was still packaged and the firebox was full of pieces. The price tag was $125 but I offered them $75 and they took it!
Once I got the stove in the shop I was shocked at how heavy and well built this was. Whoever assembled it did a piss-poor job so I disassembled everything I could and began the restoration. I replaced all the screws with stainless. The doors were sealed with an asbestosis rope and that was also replaced.
Interestingly, the cast iron thimble attached using (4) 1/4-20 screws but the holes didn't quite line up. I opened these holes up to 3/8 then mounted it without an issue.
I wire-wheeled its exterior then on a warm sunny day painted it with 1200 degree semi-gloss paint.
The stove came out great and is perfect for this application. The firebox door has a mica window which I also replaced and is great for keeping a watchful eye on its wood supply...
Wood
I live in an area where wood is available and I've been able to salvage quite a bit of dead-fall and damaged trees as well. So far this season I've cut and split about 5 cord and had another two seasoned.
That's my story and I'm sticking with it!