
Alycidon
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Everything posted by Alycidon
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Hybrid wood & electric cookers
Alycidon replied to Lucan's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
Arguably yes, but they have been in Barnoldswick since God was a boy, A -
Hybrid wood & electric cookers
Alycidon replied to Lucan's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
You are perfectly correct, after a successful period in the USA the wife of the founder was ill so they came back to UK and started production here in 1854. https://www.esse.com/about/ A -
Hybrid wood & electric cookers
Alycidon replied to Lucan's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
Esse have today announced costs of the Hybrid at £7599 inc VAT in standard colours ( 14) or £8219 inc VAT in any of the four optional enamels or £7149 inc VAT for the mat black painted model, mid JAN 19 Delivery; Contact your local Esse cooker dealer. A -
Hybrid wood & electric cookers
Alycidon replied to Lucan's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
I am an Esse cooker dealer, the Hybred model was announced at a recent customer/cooker dealer day. As far as I am aware there is nothing else in the market like it but I am not sure that it has yet gone into production. As regards price, yes they are costly but you get what you pay for. When comparing all electric cookers to the AGA equivalent they are quite a bit cheaper and they just dont go wrong. Designed and made in England since 1854, I have had an Esse in my kitchen for the last 10 years with no problems what so ever and it gets lot of use. Your local Esse cooker dealer should be able to show you the all electric model the hybred is based on. I have the all wood fired at present and should have the new 990ELX all electric in the showroom next week. A -
Green mould on my kiln dried crates !?
Alycidon replied to Sophia81's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
Dont think so myself but I dont have a kiln so no first hand knowledge. A- 18 replies
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- green mould
- kilndried oak logs
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Green mould on my kiln dried crates !?
Alycidon replied to Sophia81's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
I keep my kiln dried in a dutch barn, one closed long side and three open sides. Never have a mould issue, Think about this, putting a log in a kiln it dries from the outside in, frequently I see kiln dried half burnt logs that are dry on the outside and wet in the middle. But this log is wetter on the outside than the center !, I am thinking it may not have been in a kiln at all. . As someone else said, name the supplier. I use Saurida, excellent product, but costly. A- 18 replies
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- green mould
- kilndried oak logs
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How can we improve stove safety even further?
Alycidon replied to BowlandStoves's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
In the event of a liner claim that is a requirement, yet who keeps sweeping certificates !!. Mind you using Pouj flue parts we dont get warranty issues. A -
How can we improve stove safety even further?
Alycidon replied to BowlandStoves's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
Agreed. You and I have seen so many dangerous installs some done by Hetas registered guys. I am pretty sure that an insurance company passes a claim to a loss adjuster to job it is to get the insurer out of paying the claim. A call to local building control to ask about a record of a stove in a given house is pretty fast and if coming back negative can result in insurance cover being pulled and no pay out for fire damage. -
Firebricks - clay or vermiculite?
Alycidon replied to aesmith's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
The original Morso boards are vermiculite, sold a set for a Squirrel today. A -
They work by mixing the air, the hot air at ceiling level is forced down to head height and the heat is also projected another 10 or 15 feet. I let them go out on a sale or return basis, over 80% stay sold buy they are not for everyone. A
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Thats interesting, I would be interested to know how long the fan motor lasts positioned like that, looks like its a genuine Ecofan, they suggest not to long, From an operational point of view the stove is freestanding and in a corner so hot air will just be blown out of the RH side, cant see that would make much difference to the preferred position on the rear edge of the stove. No doubt you have tried that, so what are your conclusions in practise ?. Thanks A
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How can we improve stove safety even further?
Alycidon replied to BowlandStoves's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
Very few I would say, one town nearby was charging £400 to travel 5 miles, 2 minute check and certify, Another town was charging £150 for the same service. Maybe home insurance companies should start asking questions, is there a wood burning stove installed in the property, if so in which room, etc etc, and asking for proof of sign off, at the end of the day there are not enough civil servants to Police the existing smoke control regs let alone anything in addition. Yesterday I came across an old Clearview 650, run without firebricks, being overfired using small joinery off cuts, wooden beam about 150mm from the flue pipe shielded by a steel plate. Stove was only fit for scrap as the casing had buckled and some of the welds cracked. A -
Ash snapped off in a July storm, trunk which was over 4 feet in diameter was rotten up the middle. Had two down that night, one on the road that the council cleared and the wood fairies did most of the rest,
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Its running at present, since it came back its done about two hours work, been cleaned, sharpened, fuel emptied and put away. Unless we get more storm damage I have about a days work with the 462 till next spring, thats ringing large branches with the 25 inch bar. But I do need to find a better Husky repairer for the future. A
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There is a link of the top of the page to Sthil 462, its coming up as a bad link. A
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Dont have an issue, all mine are cut at 240mm on long cord or 200mm if I am cutting billeted cord. Billets from the splitter are usually 900mm long give or take. If customers are pedantic enough to want all exactly the same then its stacked crated kiln dried for them. A
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Sounds like the canopy was part of the firebox, Charnwood, Yeoman and a few others made them like that in the past. A
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How can we improve stove safety even further?
Alycidon replied to BowlandStoves's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
To answer the question, I feel most manufacturers user instructions are pretty inadequate, I send my own supplementary instructions out with each stove. This covers using the stove glove, use of the stove, suitable fuels, unsuitable fuels, FC info on firewood and the importance of low moisture levels, tips on burning wood, warnings about using man made solid fuels with 316 grade liner, a list of local sweeps, etc. It may be an idea to outlaw self installs, so a stove can only be sold as part of an install package, most problems are caused by self installs. Had two cases on Monday, one guy bought a non defra woodburner who lived in a smoke control area, he hung up when I gave him the good news. Another bought an inset on line because she liked it with no idea at all if it was suited to her requirements, when I asked her she just shrugged her shoulders. Then she got her son to fit it !!, he pretty obviously had little idea. A -
How can we improve stove safety even further?
Alycidon replied to BowlandStoves's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
Friend of mine is a senior person in the old Gas board. One of their engineers condemed a boiler, stuck a label on it, disconnected it and told the lady home owner and got her to sign the paperwork to say that she understood the reason why the boiler had been disconnected etc. Next day they get a call from the Police, Mr Home Owner had returned and reconnected his dangerous boiler, that night the fumes given off killed his wife. One of my regular clients sent me a pic of his nice creme Ecoburn that we installed a year or two ago, complete with a stash of my very dry kiln dried Birch stacked up behind it. The stove was running, he got an immediate phone call. A -
It ran pretty well once running, just would not start after a 20-30 minute break. In fairness one of the two bolts that held the muffler on was missing, ( visible on the front of the saw), maybe that had an input. If so my fault as it had been missing for a while and I did not bother replacing it as it seemed to run just fine without it. I did nothing repair wise to it at all, I took it to the local Husky dealer who supplied it, I know when I am out of my depth !!. A
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You cant put a normal fan on top of the chelsea canopy even if there is enough room, two reasons,. A, The Chelsea canopy is an add on unlike some older Charnwoods etc where the inside of the canopy is part of the inside of the stove. As such is not get hot enough to drive the fan properly. B, The fan needs to sit right on the back of the stove as it needs cool air coming up the back of the stove to keep the motor cool, that is likely to be restricted at best or non existant at worse with a canopy. You CAN get a cool top stove fan for use with gas and cylinder type stoves where the tops are only half as hot as the sides, this is though getting on towards £200, but it still needs the cool air flow. http://www.ecofan.co.uk/gas-stove-ecofans.html Someone else mentioned a fan stopping and starting, I only sell Ecofans so cant speak for the rest, the usual problem with them is people knock them off the stove and bend the motor shaft. In that situation a new motor resolves the issue. But they dont stop and start, you bend the shaft and its all stop period. A
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The gasket had failed between the two halves of the crankcase, Husky now fit an extra bolt in uprate the clamping force, that suggests its a design issue and a common fault, I have had it rebuilt, again, but will only use it as a back up saw to a Sthil 462 I have recently bought. Shame its so unreliable as when its running its a great saw. A
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Small stove recommendation
Alycidon replied to Chalgravesteve's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
You will need a 150mm but if your stove is approved by Defra for use burning wood within a smoke control area then you can now use a 125mm liner providing the stove has a 125mm outlet,. Defra approved stoves are set up in such a way that you cant shut them all they way down, shutting an old stove down radically increases smoke and particulate emissions and soot deposits in the flue liner. Hence a bigger liner is needed in case it gets blocked. Burn times do vary depending on the log size and moisture level, burning very dry crap in my showroom all of which is cut pretty small for max flame effect then 40 mins is about it. I have been burning a few lumps for Eucaliptus over the last few days, that was still standing in March and by my normal standards is way to wet. Its 17% on the outside which Woodsure says is acceptable, it does burn and stays in maybe 90 minutes but its not a spectacular fire which when selling the stove concept is what I need. Heat output is also modest when compared to my roaring fires. A -
Small stove recommendation
Alycidon replied to Chalgravesteve's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
The issue is that all stoves need to be CE tested, as I understand it the stove manufacturer usually gets to supply the test fuel as specify how many bits are to be burnt on a test. The public want bigger and bigger glass areas but dont want the air vent that has to be installed with all stoves with a 5.1kw or more nominal rating. 5.0kw or below no air vent is needed unless the property is built post 2007 but it is good practise/ recommended to install same if room is effectively air tight. So manufacturers are now building big stoves but having them rated at 5.0 kw thus negating the need for a vent. 3 logs burnt on a small stove with yield about 4.5kw, the same 3 burnt on a big one will yield the same. Thus there are now many 'widescreen' stoves on the market rated at 5kw with a max output of 9kw or so. The Hamlet and Aarrow ( Arada) are both of this type. As such they are very unsuited to a 3m x 4m room as the thread started has. The true 5kw output stove will have a max output of around 6.5kw. The output of any stove will depend on what you fuel it with and what volume of fuel is loaded, people when loading a stove always tend to fill it to capacity. With a modern stove that does not lead to extended burn times but a higher heat output for the same 45 mins or so before the next refuel. This practise has in effect killed demand for any traditional stove between 5kw and 8kw as a widescreen will do the job nicely and will not usually need air vents installing. We have got a couple of Arada Ecoburn 7 freestanding stoves if anyone wants a deal !!. A -
Small stove recommendation
Alycidon replied to Chalgravesteve's topic in Log burning stoves and fireplaces
For the stated small room ( 30 cu m vol approx) the heat output would be way to high, I am sure you know why and why a standard 5kw or less would be a better option in this case. The Arada version of the widescreen stove is also my best seller and has been since launch but you cant sell it into small rooms as people tend to fill the stove with logs instead of a couple at a time. Widescreen will take 5 average size logs and running pretty well flat out will be generating 7.5kw plus in this situation. A