While maybe not the most pretty thing in the home (up to personal taste), it certainly will do just as you said- allow the best use of the heat absorbed off of the pipe.It doesn't exactly apply (not a cabin... but it is the house I live in). Electric heat pump for normal needs and a wood burner for when we are home. We did two things that made a huge difference: we spent extra on insulation, and ran the pipe straight up through both levels of the house to scavenge heat before it exhausts. No matter how cold it is the interior temps don't change much and the wood burner flat out heats things up quick.![]()
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I see those barrel heaters in shops often here. They do an amazing job at heating! We had a "Magic Heat" blower box in the stovepipe of our old house. They are based on the same concept and work really well.While maybe not the most pretty thing in the home (up to personal taste), it certainly will do just as you said- allow the best use of the heat absorbed off of the pipe.
Many years ago you would find in all the Outdoor Magazines you would find Stove Plans that were made up using 2 55 gallon Barrels. One Barrel sat on legs and was the firebox, and the 2nd set on top of the 1st and was connected by a pipe, with an exhaust pipe on the opposite end.
The Concept was the 2nd barrel was the Heat Collector and would capture the heat put off from the smoke and exhaust from the firebox and then radiate it into the room. Made perfect sense.
You turn it down to pilot while you're away? That's what I did with mine for about six weeks. At least that way, I knew i could just flip it on when I got there.I have a 14 foot by 52 foot mobile home. It has a propane heater with forced air vents. I bought my own used 500 gallon tank so that I can use any supplier I want. I fill my tank every year during the "summer fill" best price for propane time period. I will use about 200-250 gallons a season. That is because I keep on the heat from the time the heater is lit until the trailer is winterized when I am done hunting in later December.
Mine is usually $8-10 and I go out one or two Saturdays a month to do work. Typically I've got some lights on, run a few power tools, and sometimes a big outdoor style fan. However, last month my bill was $14 due to being out there more often to hunt and I ran the electric heaters a few times during the middle of the day when I would come in for lunch. Not having central heat or a hot water heater running helps keep it down, as well as switching to LED bulbs. We'll be doing an overnight stay this coming week and running everything for an extended period of time so I'll see how much next month's bill ends up costing.Curious, what do you guys that have power pay per month for it?
Man, if I could get power for $10-20/mo I'd have hooked it up in no time. When I was running the numbers, the electrical coop told me it'd be $56/mo base charge, and over $60 with taxes, before a single bulb was lit. My state is also trying to only generate power with low moisture unicorn farts, so the cost is likely to rise and rise quickly as they kill off coal and shift to farts in the future.
state is also trying to only generate power with low moisture unicorn farts, so the cost is likely to rise and rise quickly as they kill off coal and shift to farts in the future.