Wood, gas, or pellet fireplace?
Wood, gas, or pellet? Which is best for the fireplace in your home? Homes in America were almost exclusively heated by either coal or wood. These days it’s pretty rare to find a home heated just by one of these two fuels. While wood stoves harken to a more rustic time and gas stoves speak to our desire for instantaneous results, a pellet fireplace may speak to our need to be efficient.
Without power, though, it seems as if there’s nothing better than wood burning in a fireplace. It’s a flickering, dancing heat that’s been with humankind for at least four hundred thousand years. It’s provided us with food and warmth for many millennia. It’s no wonder we find it reassuring. However, wood stoves require trees. You may need as as 1/2 to two cords of dry wood. Maintenance for a wood stove, too, is important and requires removing annually creosote that may build up during the course of a winter.
Gas fireplaces, on the other hand, are far more convenient. Flip a switch. You have fire. You don’t require a wood box or the mess that may go with building a fire. No clean up, either. The cost of natural gas might be a concern, especially if it continues to rise. They don’t even require chimneys. If you’re looking to retrofit your fireplace, then gas might be the way to go…
But there’s also the pellet fireplace to continue. What’s the main attraction here? In this case, it’s their amazing efficiency. Introduced in the 1980s, pellet stoves and fireplaces have a combustion rate of nearly 100 per cent. And they can burn corn pellets as an alternate to wood pellets. Like the gas fireplace, they’re cleaner than the wood variety, although they’re a little more complicated than their fireplace cousins. Usually, they work exceedingly well, but they must be maintained and cleaned regularly. You’ll need to be sure to read all the instructions that come with them in order to adjust the stove to get the best burn rate. A possible drawback is that a pellet stove does need electricity to move the pellets into the burner. If you don’t have a battery system in place, then the pellet stove might not work in an outage, even then batteries may not last longer than a full day.
With some research of the different manufacturers, you’re more likely to find the best choice to heat your house.