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Reduce Your Heating Bills: Light a Fire!

Posted: January 26th, 2010 | Author: | Filed under: Home Improvement Articles | Tags: , , , | No Comments »

  

Fireplaces can’t be beat for beauty and romance but, for making use of a fireplace to heat your home, they leave a little to be desired. While the heat is very strong if you are sitting directly beside it, they just are not successful at getting the heat out to the rest of the room, let alone the entire house. But a traditional fireplace can be altered so that it provides heat along with visual appeal.

A regular fireplace has two primary difficulties. The doors, if there are any, do not fit tightly. Heated air from the room is pulled out and up the chimney. It is then replaced by the outside air, making the room even chillier. Next, there’s no inherent way for the air that the fire heats to get further out into the room than merely several inches in front of the fireplace.

To make use of your fireplace to heat your whole home as efficiently and satisfactorily as you can, you will likely have to use a fireplace insert. There are a number of different kinds to be found, so spend a little time finding out what the choices are before you shop.

Not so long ago folks would often just put a wood stove in the fireplace. The set up process is not a great deal more complicated nowadays, but much safer and more efficient. The first step is to clean all the soot out of both the fireplace and chimney. Then, there’s a special liner that must be installed into the chimney. Once installed properly, it won’t need to be removed to be cleaned.

A fireplace heat exchanger and a gasketed door will be then be added. The heat exchanger will impel the heated air out deeper into the room so that you can feel the heat everywhere. The door will lessen the air consumption to just enough to burn the wood.

A fireplace blower is a viable alternative to the insert. The blower will pull in the unheated air and exchange it with air that has been warmed by the fireplace, blowing it out far into the room. There are different variations of fireplace blowers to be had, and you might need to have electric wiring done on your fireplace.

These are all are ways to alter your current fireplace to be a better heater. But if you’re adding a fireplace to your house or actually constructing a new home, you can also investigate a vented air style of fireplace. While it might not be able to warm up the entire home, it can do a good job of heating a room.

You’ll first have to figure out what your budget is, as well as your objectives for heating. Armed with that knowledge, you can do your research. And you will find a way of using a fireplace to heat your house to fit the requirements of your house and your pocketbook.

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Rev Up Your Fireplace with a Heat Exchanger

Posted: December 8th, 2009 | Author: | Filed under: Home Improvement Articles | Tags: , | No Comments »

Many individuals use their fireplaces to save on heating costs throughout the winter. As a rule, this is a good practice as long as they keep safety in mind. However it’s not uncommon for folks to realize that they are not getting the heat they expected from their fireplace.

In fact, many people find that rooms become colder than usual when a fire is burning, and that the only way to be warm is to sit right in front of the fireplace. As a result, there are a number of individuals attempting to find out how others use their fireplace to get a warm and toasty living area.

The answer is both simple and complicated all at the same time. If many areas of your house feel particularly chilly when you have a fire burning, you almost certainly would derive benefit from a fireplace heat exchanger. That’s the easy part of the answer; the more complex part is understanding exactly why you need it.

The point of the matter is that the fire in an open wood burning fireplace will go through much of the air in your house that was already heated to a comfortable room temperature. The fireplace uses up this air, but it also replaces it; however, the replacement is cold air from outside. That’s the explanation for why a burning fire in one room results in the rest of your home getting colder.

However there is an easy answer to the problem; just get a fireplace heat exchanger. By putting in a heat exchanger with a set of glass doors, you can get rid of that cold air in the rest of the house.

If you have an open wood burning fireplace, a heat exchanger is essential; it’s unfortunate that so many individuals don’t understand this. In the end, they wind up staying chilled or wasting more time and money trying to heat a house that is always being hit with cold air from the outside. If you don’t have this important fireplace accessory, you are fighting an endless battle that you cannot win.

You will likely spend around five hundred dollars to purchase a fireplace heat exchanger. Also, you will have to shop for a set of glass doors or that five hundred for the heat exchanger will simply be wasted.

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