We have one, for a couple years now. It will burn anything tossed in, and don't have to cut the stuff down as far(less work) either. We are pulling a lot of heat off our unit(couple buildings, long snaps of cold waeather(teens/twenties...below) and nothing is really sealed tight), have to fire two/ three (or more) times a day to keep it happy.
For only one building, unless very large or heat turned way up, you might not have to stoke it over for a couple days at a time. They DON"T burn full out full time(like a fire place or stand alone inside furnace)... When water temp drops, then the draft opens to get air to the fire, once up to temp it shuts down. You open the door you'd almost think the fire was completely dead. Once running for the season better just keep it fed, or fight to get it going again everytime when not in use.
If you don't want to stoke it get one with a back up system to hold the water temp, they chew wood in a hurry with out getting heat in building just getting temp back up. In our unit The water lines, once in the building, go through a temp control valve, to low(under I think 150 deg.) it shuts down flow to the radiator/heat exchanger(causing cold building) and sends it all back to the furnace to be reheated.
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Today's Featured Article - Earthmaster Project Progress Just a little update on my Earthmaster......it's back from the dead! I pulled the head, and soaked the stuck valves with mystery oil overnight, re-installed the head, and bingo, the compression returned. But alas, my carb foiled me again, it would fire a second then flood out. After numerous dead ends for a replacement carb, I went to work fixing mine.I soldered new floats on the float arm, they came from an old motorcycle carb, replaced the packing on the throttle shaft with o-rings, cut new ga
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