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Brian Gaff \(Sofa\) Brian Gaff \(Sofa\) is offline
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Default Multi fuel wood burning stoves

Yes go back to 2011 and see what the difference is :-)
Brian

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On Wednesday, 5 January 2011 17:58:29 UTC, Tim.. wrote:
"Tim Lamb" wrote in message
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In message
,
harry
writes
On Jan 3, 9:19 pm, geraldthehamster wrote:
There seems to be a lot of variation in price, for the same
kilowattage. Would anyone care to recommend a make, in the 5-8 kW
range? What is the Miele of multifuel stoves?

Cheers
Richard

Anything from Norway/Sweden. You mostly pay for fancy ironwork, some
of which is quite fragile. "Flamewashing" doesn't work.

If you can, go for a "roomsealed" one, ie draws air from outside
directly into the stove. These avoid drawing cold air into the room.
http://www.stovesonline.co.uk/external-air-stove.html

Not a recommendation but a couple of points....

Fire bars used for multifuel are more expensive as they are said to need
chrome steel.

Heat output to the room is seriously diminished by back and side
boilers.

We have a stove from Clearview (Shropshire), welded steel, underfloor
draft option and airwash.

In my experience, airwash does work. The glass accumulates a grey finish
over several weeks constant use. This can be readily scrubbed off with
washing up liquid and sponge. Dry, mainly hardwood fuel. Previous
experience with glass doors was black soot requiring pot scouring.


I would also agree that the Clearview is the rolls royce of stoves. I'd
also
agree they are very expensive, but IMHO, worth it. The Wenlock is also a
good stove.

Tim..


We also have a Clearview and like it. The airwash works. Firelighters
are seldom needed as a few sheets of scrunched up newspaper are usually
enough to light dry logs - even oak.
A local tree surgeon tells me that he is getting a good price for chipped
wood at the moment because there is a shortage of wood for power stations
to burn. I think he mentioned around £55 per tonne, collected from his
storage field.

John