H
hampshire26 Feb 2020 21:18Corten steel is also great for keeping slugs away from raised garden beds. They really dislike it.
Baufie schrieb:
You said it, most of them.
It also depends on the quality of the stove builder. We have a 12 kW stove from Eggenfelden. Even after three consecutive burns, we don’t get more than a 1 degree Celsius (1.8°F) increase...
I wouldn’t want to do without mine anymore; it’s on almost every evening and sometimes even early in the morning on weekends.Yeah, the storage is everything.Baufie schrieb:
You’re right, most of them.
It also depends on the quality of the stove builder. We have a 12 kW stove from Eggenfelden. Even after 3 consecutive firings, we don’t manage to get more than a 1-degree increase...
I’d guess at least 160m2 (1,722 sq ft) with an open floor plan plus possibly a loft space?
Pinkiponk schrieb:
I love Antonio’s half-built-in bathtub. And especially his "clay ball sink," to put it somewhat playfully. The toilet paper holder with the small integrated spray hose is also great. Under which reply number can pictures of this be viewed? Because I can’t find a user named "Antonio" or anything similar in the forum search.
F
Fummelbrett!27 Feb 2020 09:32haydee schrieb:
My parents used to heat 120 sqm (1,292 sq ft) of living space with a tiled stove. It was actually quite comfortable. No, it’s not really suitable for people who work full-time.
[...] Two winters ago, due to renovations, we had to shut down the oil heating and switched to coal. The tiled stove on the ground floor was loaded in the morning and could be closed after half an hour – it kept over 80 sqm (860 sq ft) warm. All the doors were open, and every room was at least 20°C (68°F). The same applied to the wood-burning stove on the upper floor: in the morning, 9 briquettes were placed on the embers, after half an hour the stove was closed and all the doors were opened. It was cozy and warm everywhere – even when I came home from work 12 hours later. Then I added more fuel.
As a permanent solution, it wouldn’t work for me, especially because I hate emptying the ash. But we got through the winter just fine.
Currently, on the upper floor (living room), we burn a few logs of wood now and then, sometimes every day, sometimes not for two weeks. I love this kind of warmth.
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