I am on my 2nd year with my Dwaft Mini 4k wood stove. The cold air intake works great.
@djgarriga2955
11 ай бұрын
so sick dude, looks nice
@madnessintomagic
11 ай бұрын
Glad you made it smaller than the model. It looked like it would take up a ton of space. Looks like you’re fine on the 2 and the 10….? Is the top of that thing big enough for a tea kettle?
@GarmiOffgrid
11 ай бұрын
Yup it’s big enough for a Dutch oven
@madnessintomagic
11 ай бұрын
@@GarmiOffgrid Nice!!
@__Andrew_
9 ай бұрын
White text against white sky background needs a bit of a rethink doesnt it ;)
@GarmiOffgrid
9 ай бұрын
That’s your comment? 😂 It’s actually not white text, it’s white text with a shadowed border and can easily be read on a decent display..
@LiveFreeOrRIP
11 ай бұрын
I know zero about woodstoves. I figured to ask why would you cut a hole in the roof and deal with all that when you could have just punched a hole in the wall removing the chance of a roof leak and a easier install all around. Obviously you would still need a wall bracket and the chimney pipe to go thought the wall. I guess if you wanted to save money on outside pipe you could put the hole higher makes no deference.. 2nd thing I see is a SMALL SMALL STOVE. TOO small. I had a jotul 602 and it was way way to small. The issue isnt the heat if puts off its the burn time. My 602 I would get 4 hours max. So if I stoked it at 10 and went to bed at 2 or 3am the stove was completely out. So unless you like stoking every 2 3 hours you have to get a larger stove with a bigger firebox. The idea of a tiny stove is Fantastic until you realize it has zero burn time. I sold the Jotul 602 sadly i loved that stove and picked up a Fisher Baby Bear. This stove is a POWER HOUSE. it will burn 6 hours no issue and it puts out heat like mad. I paid 150.00 for it in rough condition and restored it. It easily heats my cabin of 500sf no issues at all. and its got a perfect look to it. Its NOT to large either. also it will take a 18 inch log NO issue so some of the 16 inch stuff will fit NO problem. If you can just fit a 16 then you will run into issues constantly of something NOT fitting and its a hassle.. Having the extra space for logs is a game changer. Thanks for posting!!!
@GarmiOffgrid
11 ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment. my initial inclination was to go out the wall. And that’s how I actually planned for a very long time. I decided to go out the roof for several reasons. Cost, efficiency of having lots of vertical rise in a warm space, and simplicity. We also wanted to use the top of the stove for cooking. When you go out the back of the stove, that requires extra 90° bends when going out the wall ,which affect efficiency. Originally we were going to use a larger stove. And that sounds great and all, until you cook yourself out because it’s too hot. Opening all the windows to counter that, seems counterproductive. Not to mention trying to run a larger stove “on low” with your wood smoldering, creates more creosote. You are correct and that the fire will require more attention. That doesn’t bother me. The 192 square foot place is insulated so well that we already spent a 39° night in there with only one intervention at 2 AM by adding a log and woke up to 65° in the place. So no complaints so far! I should mention that this is just a getaway cabin. We have no plans to live in it I don’t think. So the inconvenience of tending to the fire outweigh the inconvenience of dealing with chimney fires or too much heat.
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