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| wstov:wood_stoves [2025/12/09 14:23] – [Lighting the stove] Katja Durrani | wstov:wood_stoves [2025/12/17 11:15] (current) – removed Simon Grant | ||
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| - | # Wood stoves | ||
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| - | , usually with a door at the front for loading, lighting and ash removal – but sometimes on top in small stoves. | ||
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| - | Open fires are pretty, but most of the heat disappears up the chimney. Stoves are typically around 3 times more efficient than fireplaces. Also, updraughts from below pass through the logs and draw off volatile gases (which provide most of the heat) and suck them up the chimney unburnt, which wastes heat and causes tar build-up in the chimney. A fireplace also sucks in a great deal of air to operate without smoking, which creates cold draughts in your house. | ||
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| - | A stove contains the fire, allowing the wood to burn in a controlled manner. The air supply can be regulated to alter the heat output of the stove. The metal casing of a stove heats up and radiates heat out into the room. You can have a simple stove for heating, or one with a back boiler to provide hot water or heat radiators in other parts of the house. | ||
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| - | , and so that rules out large urban areas, where most people live. So we’re not saying that wood heat is for everyone, by a long stretch. Ideally, it’s for people living in rural locations, with an easily-available, | ||
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| - |  but new trees absorb it. As long as we plant new trees and maintain forest cover (which is happening – see above), then it’s not possible for wood burning to increase the amount of carbon in the atmosphere. Remember that whether we burn wood or not, the carbon in trees will end up back in the atmosphere anyway, as the trees fall to the ground and rot. This is not the case for fossil fuels, which should be left in the ground. | ||
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| - | ### Pollution | ||
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| - | Emissions from wood burning are lower than coal, oil or gas as regards NOx and SOx (acid rain) and carbon monoxide, but worse for particulates. For space heating, emissions and energy losses from power stations make conventional electricity the worst option environmentally; | ||
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| - | The EROEI (energy return on energy invested) is [better for wood fuel than for natural gas or oil](https:// | ||
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| - | Modern ‘clean burn’ wood stoves can legally be used in smokeless zones; they use secondary combustion, baffles or catalyts to maximise combustion of gases and particulates, | ||
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| - | _How to install a wood stove and flue._ | ||
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| - | ### Other benefits | ||
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| - | In rural areas, it’s difficult to know what is better for heating than wood, in terms of pollution, carbon emissions and price. Logs are the cheapest way of heating your space (around 1/5 the price of electricity per kWh) – especially if you harvest the wood from your own land, or from nearby woodland for free. It will probably get relatively cheaper too, as fossil fuel prices rise, and carbon-neutral fuels get tax breaks. | ||
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| - | Firewood is a renewable resource, that needs no factories, fossil fuels or synthetic materials to produce – only land, sunshine and rain. We advocate the wise and sustainable use of the resource, so that woodland will be preserved and hopefully expanded, as a source of wood fuel as well as timber; and selective rather than clear felling, so that wildlife habitat is enhanced and expanded. | ||
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| - | Wood frees householders from centralised control when it comes to heating. If they have a local source of firewood, they won’t be cold, or reliant on multinational corporations. Heating with wood is a rough-and-ready, | ||
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| - | NB: to reduce the need for wood fuel, we advocate the construction of homes in [ways that reduce heating requirements](http:// | ||
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| - |  [new](http:// | ||
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| - | Stoves need air and if the output of your stove is above 5kW then you need to provide permanent extra ventilation. | ||
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| - | ### Build your own stove | ||
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| - | If you have access to sheet steel and cutting and welding equipment, you could even build your own, which would work out cheaper still, but don't underestimate the work needed to build an efficient stove. It’s hard to roll and seam weld flue pipe so unless you have the equipment you are better off buying it. | ||
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| - | Examine existing stoves to get ideas. Remember to add a baffle plate to increase the distance covered by the flue gases which in turn increases the stove' | ||
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| - | . In the background is a home-made saw-horse, on which you can saw cords (lengths of timber) to the right length to fit into your wood stove. | ||
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| - | ### Flue / chimney | ||
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| - | Old chimneys will need re-lining, as tar could be deposited, causing a fire hazard, plus gases could seep through into living areas. Chimneys must be swept every year to remove creosote and tar and avoid chimney fires. | ||
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| - | The first section can be single skin flue pipe which is best made of stainless steel because flue deposits are corrosive. Running over 1500mm in single-skin flue pipe is not recommended because of the high levels of tar condensate that would result. The external surface of single skin flue pipe must be three times it's diameter from combustible materials. Running single skin flue externally is not a great idea as the flue gases will get very cold. | ||
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| - | Lining and insulating your chimney is firstly to reduce the risk of chimney fire. The colder flue gases get the more tar they deposit and it is this tar that causes chimney fires. | ||
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| - |  which means the risk of chimney fire is high. It will also be very difficult to safely run this flue through wooden parts of houses. | ||
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| - | Going straight up and through the roof is nearly always cheaper and easier than going out through a wall and then up. Check current building regulations for the height of the flue / distance from roof. | ||
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| - | _How to light a wood stove (NB: you don't need firelighters!)_. | ||
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| - | ### Firewood | ||
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| - | 5 tonnes of wood per year is more than enough for a basic stove in your main living area – but that’s assuming it’s in use most of the time from October to April; unseasoned wood is heavier because of the water content. | ||
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| - | You can buy logs split, or cords (lengths over 1m) and cut and split them yourself, in which case you’ll need a [chainsaw](/ | ||
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| - | ### Lighting the stove | ||
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| - | Leave a layer of ash, add paper, dry kindling (you don’t need firelighters) followed by a few small, dry logs. There will be an air inlet to adjust air flow – have this open at first, and slowly shut it down as the fire becomes more established. Many stoves have a primary and secondary air supply. Often, the primary air vent is near the base of the stove with the secondary vent nearer the top. To light the stove, open the primary air supply up. When it is lit then close the primary air down and use the secondary air to control the fire. Because the secondary air supply comes in from above this makes for more efficient combustion of the wood. | ||
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| - | Wood ash contains potash, and can be used as a fertilizer (best applied at the end of the growing season, and not on alkaline soil). | ||
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| - | NB: stoves should definitely never be used just for aesthetics – e.g. a wood stove burning, but also with radiators running from a gas-fired boiler. | ||
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| - | See [here](https:// | ||
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| - | ## Further resources | ||
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| - | ## Specialist(s) | ||
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