Heating With Wood. Preparing For The Heating Season.

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  • Опубліковано 4 жов 2024
  • This video is about what I go through every year to get ready for the heating season. Takes some work, but it is worth it

КОМЕНТАРІ • 415

  • @steveferguson1232
    @steveferguson1232 8 місяців тому +1

    What I like about you, is you can make mundane tasks interesting. Love your channel

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  8 місяців тому +1

      I appreciate that! Not taking care of things like this sure can ruin a day quickly. Thanks for watching.

  • @lakebum6211
    @lakebum6211 6 років тому +41

    Beautiful place you have and that was a good tip to use the ashes to clean the glass.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +7

      It is the only thing I have found that removes the soot easily. polishes up the glass in no time. Thanks for watching.

  • @DilipMuralidaran
    @DilipMuralidaran 6 років тому +22

    I always love your simple, no complex language, humble narration. Its such a pleasure to observe life halfway across the world. Best wishes for the Holiday season from the south of India.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +4

      There's just too much crazy ranting on youtube so I try and keep it simple. Also with life keeping things simple makes it more enjoyable. I hope you also have a great holiday season. Thanks for watching my videos.

    • @edwinleroy8002
      @edwinleroy8002 3 роки тому

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      I stupidly lost the login password. I appreciate any assistance you can give me

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      @jeremiasalexzander9838 3 роки тому

      @Edwin Leroy Instablaster ;)

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      @edwinleroy8002 3 роки тому

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    • @edwinleroy8002
      @edwinleroy8002 3 роки тому

      @Jeremias Alexzander It worked and I finally got access to my account again. Im so happy!
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  • @waltwatson1856
    @waltwatson1856 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for posting this video - I've been looking high and low for how to clean the creosote from the stove pipe on my Jotul F500. Found several for the new version, the V3, but I have an older model that matches your stove. Now I'm ready to tackle it!

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  Рік тому

      This one is very easy to keep clean. Just be careful when vacuuming that insulation blanket on top. I replace that blanket every couple years. Just buy the sheet insulation from your stove shop and cut it down to fit. Great stove that's very easy to use. Thanks for watching.

  • @russse2793
    @russse2793 6 років тому +1

    You are an infinite bank of knowledge. You know a lot about a lot, and like it has been said in other numerous comments, you are just easy to listen to with no drama. God Bless from Phoenix.

  • @royjones59344
    @royjones59344 5 років тому +5

    Great set up. I heat mostly with a wood stove and it's one of the great joys of life. I find the stacking the waiting and the burning very relaxing.Really enjoyed the video too.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому +1

      We really enjoy the way it heats the house. Plus I get some exercise cutting, splitting, and stacking the wood. Thanks for watching.

  • @ecrusch
    @ecrusch 6 років тому +23

    Beautiful place you have there my friend.
    That wood burner is a beauty too.
    Thank you for your videos.
    I enjoy every one of them.
    Eric

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +4

      I figured a good stove would last a lifetime so we went with the Jotul that has been a problem free and fairly efficient stove so far. Thanks so much for watching my videos.

  • @beebob1279
    @beebob1279 6 років тому +3

    Nice demonstration on how to prep a wood burner for the winter fires. I also appreciate you explaining that you clean the flu in January. My rule is one and a half cords and then clean the flu.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +1

      That is usually about 8 face cords for me. I have never gotten more then a couple cups of creosote at that point. It is a very clean burning stove with the afterburner. Thanks for watching.

  • @groofop
    @groofop 6 років тому +3

    That looks like a Jotul Firelight 600 CB. Beastly stoves for sure. That "active ash pan" is one of my favorite features as it keeps the inside of the box mostly ash free but you still benefit from the heat of the coals. I sell stoves and fireplaces for a living so it's always fascinating to see others using them and to see how you maintain the stove. Awesome video!

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +1

      Thanks. It is a Oslo 500 and has been a great stove. The afterburner on the top keeps it burning fairly clean. It was the perfect size for my house. Thanks for watching.

  • @MrJorgvankleef
    @MrJorgvankleef 2 роки тому +1

    Nice explanation ! Thank you, greets from overseas, France 👋🏻👋🏻👋🏻😀

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  2 роки тому +1

      You are welcome. Wood is a great renewable source of heat. UA-cam makes the world seem small. Thanks for watching.

  • @barnabyaprobert5159
    @barnabyaprobert5159 3 роки тому +1

    The perfect woodstove! Maybe Santa will bring me one!

  • @jimbol8695
    @jimbol8695 6 років тому +2

    Every time I watch one of your videos it always jars a distant memory from my past and this one is no exception. Years ago, as a boy, that was my job to clean out the stove. One time I had this idea of using the shopvac too. I was about 3/4 the way through the cleaning when I heard a change of pitch and turned around to find that the filter had dropped off the mount and soot was shooting out the exhaust. Needless to say Mom was furious and the white painted ceiling wasn't white no more .It wasn't funny back then, but it sure is funny now. Thanks for posting.

  • @thebeans7846
    @thebeans7846 5 років тому +2

    Very thorough video! I've heated exclusively with Jotul Firelight 600 for 13 years and it will come with me if I should ever move to a different home ... no ifs ands or buts. I use single wall for the first 6 feet above the stove and stainless double insulated for all above that (I'm in a warmer zone than you) because I was concerned about losing the good pipe heat closest to stove by insulating it. 13 years of pipe cleaning later and seeing the drastic difference in creosote buildup between the two types of pipe, it will be time to replace the lower pipe at the end of this season ... and after seeing your video, I might reconsider the insulated.Thanks for the great video!

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому +1

      I used the double wall because the stove is installed with a heat shield so it could sit closer to the wall and single wall pipe did not meet the building code required clearance. Thanks for watching.

  • @caroleferreira2846
    @caroleferreira2846 Рік тому

    What a great calming video. Thanks so much.

  • @wbanks7491
    @wbanks7491 6 років тому +1

    Just watching your videos brings back so many good memories of when I was younger and would go to visit my grand-mother in the country in the winter. She had an old pot belly heater, that thing would put out some heat !! Thanks for sharing your wonderful videos. Stay warm, looking forward to more!

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      I guess our grandchildren will be telling stories like that someday. The only change will be nanny & poppy were to cheep to buy oil so they had to drag in wood and wouldn't let us use the internet in their house. Thanks for watching.

  • @matthewcallahan7231
    @matthewcallahan7231 6 років тому +1

    Great video! That brought back some memories. We heated with wood growing up. Me and pops cut truck load after truck load of wood every year. He is now retired and in his 70’s. He now just plops in his recliner and grabs a remote, points it at the fireplace, and ‘poof’ his gas logs fire up.lol

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      If I make it to my 70's, I will probably do the same. Right now I can use all the exercise that I can get. Thanks for watching.

  • @elkharttimmons9295
    @elkharttimmons9295 6 років тому +2

    Thanks for the video. Appreciate you taking the time to take us through it all. Starting to heat with wood for the first time this season after getting hit with heavy energy bills last winter. Looking forward to it.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      It takes some work and pre planing but saves quite a bit if you have a source for wood. Thanks for watching.

  • @chowmikki
    @chowmikki 4 роки тому +1

    Nice video. Nice piece of property, very well organized. We sold our cottage which was heated with a wood guzzler Franklin stove. My new cabin came with a stove similar to yours. So much easier to keep a fire going. My husband wants a pellet stove. I am leaning towards propane. With the propane I can keep my indoor plants alive. With the pellet and wood stove they die in the cold.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  4 роки тому +1

      We have no problem keeping plants alive with the woodstove. On real cold nights I have to get up and add some wood in the middle of the night but it stays nice and warm in the house. Propane is very expensive to heat with around here but I may switch to it for backup because oil grows alge in the tank if left too long. I used pellets in my garage for a while but gave up after the price spike and shortage back a while. You should check that you have proper insulation. Thanks for watching.

  • @welderman1042
    @welderman1042 4 роки тому +1

    This is a fantastic video thank you for taking the time to make it. I've always heated with wood my dad burned wood all his life and his father did as well, paying $4.50 for heating oil is plan out thievery in my mind and I've had a 1/4 tank of fuel oil in my basement for the last 15 years. You got a new subscriber take care and thank you

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  4 роки тому

      We love wood heat. A couple years ago I cheated and bought a log load that really made it easier and still saved us a lot of money. Thanks for watching and subscribing.

  • @skubefamilychannel
    @skubefamilychannel 4 роки тому +1

    Finally I witness a guy who is properly taking care of his life and limb. Clean the pipes, control the heat, use a magnetic thermometer, know the safe ranges......cooler bad, warmer better, hot best. regulate, regulate !!! Do your homework.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  4 роки тому

      This has been a very hard year to keep the stove burning properly with all the swings in outdoor temperature. We love wood heat. Thanks for watching.

  • @william38022
    @william38022 6 років тому +2

    I’ve been looking at your stuff on and off for a little while now brother I have say you’re probably one of the most down to earth guys I’ve ever come across and probably an engineering genius you’re very pleasant to listen to and to learn from appreciate your channel I think you’re doing a fine job at educating the public about a lot of different things and we really enjoy watching you and listening to you Whatever you do please keep those wonderful videos coming

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +1

      We all have different ideas and experience. UA-cam is a great way to share them. Thanks for watching my videos.

  • @iaindennis3321
    @iaindennis3321 5 років тому +1

    Watching a real fire burn on a winters evening is better than watching TV.

  • @justinfoley4954
    @justinfoley4954 4 роки тому +1

    Yup. Just double checked. This guy is awesome. Love the video.

  • @scottcoleman7304
    @scottcoleman7304 3 роки тому +1

    Gorgeous property

  • @mrglock2313
    @mrglock2313 6 років тому +2

    Excellent choice in a wood stove. I have multiple stoves. I finally got one similar to yours. A buddy of mine had your same stove and I was hooked on the look and quality. Good video

  • @theinternets7516
    @theinternets7516 6 років тому +2

    That trick with the ash on the window was awesome.

  • @drrussdc
    @drrussdc 5 років тому +1

    Very nice summary tutorial!

  • @lodprice2343
    @lodprice2343 6 років тому +1

    I would have never dreamed that the ashes could be used to clean the glass. From the video, it appears the soot comes off with ease. I do not have a fireplace, but at the end of the video, seeing the fire through the glass looks so inviting - kind of makes me wish I did.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      I feel it is a great way to heat. The ashes on a damp paper towel are the only thing I have found that easily removes soot from glass. Thanks for watching.

  • @walterdavis3638
    @walterdavis3638 4 роки тому +1

    Nice video and solid advice. I see you reply to all comments, you are quite the man. We have the same stove and I didn't know the top comes off. Thanks for the info and nice presentation. I will be following more of your videos.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  4 роки тому

      Thanks. Be sure to check that top insulation blanket when you clean it. It has been a great stove and is the perfect size for our house. Hope you find other videos that interest you on my channel. Thanks for watching.

  • @tomohawk5567
    @tomohawk5567 6 років тому +3

    At last, an American I can actually listen too, youve got a new subscriber. Great video thanks for sharing 👍

  • @PlanetMojo
    @PlanetMojo 4 роки тому +1

    Our roof is a 10/12 pitch so going up there is near impossible, so what we did was put a clean-out tee right above the stove. We use a flex brush and clean upwards and have a mark on the rods (you add rods as you push it up) where to stop. We have a 'Durango' stove that is 2' deep on the inside, and a fill fill last all day. We have a super insulated house so it takes very little to heat it -- real easy to over heat in fact. It gets 40 below (without wind chill) here in SW Wisconsin some winters, and wood heat is wonderful for those days!

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  4 роки тому +1

      That would be a scary roof to try and stand on while pushing a brush. Being clean is all that matters how every you do it. Our stove is perfect for all but those real cold wind chill days. All the big old windows in the great room loose a lot of heat and the stove can really crank through wood on those days. Luckily we only get a couple days like that a year. We love the wood heat. Thanks for watching.

  • @scottwallace3900
    @scottwallace3900 6 років тому +3

    Love it it's a lot of work but the money saved can be substantial your lucky to have your own supply more money saved

  • @RichHealy
    @RichHealy 6 років тому +2

    What an awesome video, great place, great stove. Thanks for sharing!

  • @bocco49
    @bocco49 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks for sharing your home is very nice and you definitely got a lot of firewood
    Take care
    God Bless

  • @geraldfitzgibbon7428
    @geraldfitzgibbon7428 4 роки тому +1

    Nice work. I use tea bag on the glass front when its cool. An it just cleans right off.

  • @atozrecovery518
    @atozrecovery518 5 років тому +2

    I bought a ecofan that's driven by the heat from my wood burning stove to help speed the heat. I bought from the amish works perfectly. Basically heat rises, the fan when running pushes heat straight. Helping heat a room.

  • @otamaki277
    @otamaki277 4 роки тому +2

    You look like a Santa clause in a beautiful and peaceful land. Love ❤️ the video!

  • @nickwarner8158
    @nickwarner8158 5 років тому +4

    Love wood heat. I heat my shop with it and its the cheapest heat out there. I can get pallets from work for kindling and there are always ads on Craigslist around here where people either want a tree gone or had it blow down in a storm that you can take for free. Sometimes its even blocked up into larger chunks. So a little chainsaw and maul time and free fuel!
    I've gotten tired of the little woodstove I have, especially since it doesn't have a blower so I'm in the middle of welding up a new one that should fit the bill for the shop quite well. The beauty of it is, its built with leftover steel from old jobs and leftover welding rod that is still good but was out of a rod oven more than 2 hours so cannot be used for code welding. Basically a free stove. Blower supplied by spare parts from when I replaced my old house furnace 2 years back.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому +1

      It definitely is a great way to heat. It does take some work but is great exercise. Around here you can't build your own stove because they need a UL listing to get a certificate of compliance from the town so your insurance company will cover the building it is in. Thanks for watching.

  • @coldspring624
    @coldspring624 5 років тому +1

    I have had my Oslo the same number of yrs ....it has treated me well . Jotul was a very good choice for me .....so good I am building a new place 600 miles away and it is going with me.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      From what I understand to meet the new EPA requirements they have replaced the afterburner with a catalytic converter on the new Oslo's. It needs lots of maintenance and only gives it another 2% efficiency. Keep that old one as long as you can. Thanks for watching.

  • @pjdambra
    @pjdambra 6 років тому +1

    Nice tip with the ash and wet paper towel to clean the stove glass. Looks Great.

  • @thomasdonald5402
    @thomasdonald5402 6 років тому +4

    Just thought you might like to know - the reason why the ash trick on the window works is because it produces lye (potassium hydroxide KOH). When hardwood ash is mixed with water, it produces potassium hydroxide lye. Buckskinners know that trick because it's also an excellent way to remove hair from a deer hide for tanning. When you're using the wet paper towel, and you dab it into the ash, you're putting lye directly on the smoke/fire stains. IF you continue to clean the glass that way, I would HIGHLY recommend wearing rubber gloves when you do, to ensure the wet ash doesn't come in contact with your skin.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +1

      Thanks. I had no idea that is what causes the ash to clean so well. I thought it was like a pumice that polished the creosote off. Rubber gloves don't do good near hot glass so the stove gloves should help. Thanks for watching.

    • @thomasdonald5402
      @thomasdonald5402 6 років тому +4

      Buckskinners have been using it for centuries. We mix hardwood ash with water and let it sit for about 2 days. Then you drop an egg in the solution. The egg should sink until an area about the size of a quarter is at the surface of the water. At that point the solution is ready. Strain it/filter it. Then you put your deer (elk/moose/antelope/buffalo/other) hide in the solution and let it sit for a few days. Every couple of days, test it by gently pulling on the hair. When the hair slips out of the skin with just a gentle rubbing motion, the hide is ready to scrape.
      I'm sure the grittiness of the ash has something to do with the cleaning properties.....just like I'm sure the lye portion has something to do with it. Thanks for sharing the video.

  • @plutha7520
    @plutha7520 4 роки тому +1

    Excellent information. Thanks

  • @jimyost2585
    @jimyost2585 5 років тому +1

    I've been using a woodstove as my main heat source since the winter of 1983. My first woodstove was an Efel that was really efficient but not made very well. My second stove was a big Jotul, the biggest one they make. I liked it but it was way too big for my house. So in 2008 I bought a DutchWest stove by Vermont Castings and I dearly love it. I've been using it for ten years and haven't had the first problem with it, and it works as good as it did when it was new.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      We love this Jotul. No problems yet and it is the perfect size for our house. A great way to heat. Thanks for watching.

    • @jimyost2585
      @jimyost2585 5 років тому +1

      @@unemployedredneckhillbilly2023 ~ Teah, I loved my Jotul too, but, like I said, it was way too big for this little shack I live in now, which has 950 sq. ft. of floorspace. That big Jotul is made to heat a 3,000 sq. ft. house. In fact I still have it stored in my smokehouse, but it's not hooked up. It's been sitting there for ten years. I should probably sell it.

  • @MrZipperhead16
    @MrZipperhead16 6 років тому +1

    The work you have to put in is well worth it. Nothing like a fire on a cold night.

  • @robmazzitelli
    @robmazzitelli 6 років тому +5

    Nice video. Love the stove and your property.

  • @fanawb
    @fanawb 4 роки тому +8

    The way he takes care of that stove,it will last for years and years to come

  • @cliffordcosta2221
    @cliffordcosta2221 6 років тому +1

    Nice video Ed, you really handle the firewood an awful lot. I scored some 4' x 4' x 4' heavy duty wire bins. Split the wood into the wire bins, put a tarp over them, let it dry, then fork lift the bins one at a time into the garage as needed. Now for a couple of weeks I don't have to go outside to get wood for the stove. It has make my wood buring life easier.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      I don't mind the handling. I find by getting everything spread out in the wind and sun for a couple of weeks brings my creosote down to almost nothing. Maybe when I get a little older, I will get a bigger tractor that will be able to handle bins like that. I see big folding bins like that on Craigslist quite often. I keep one rack of wood in the garage for the days when the snow is so deep that you can't get the front door open. Thanks for watching.

  • @reynaldovalle1773
    @reynaldovalle1773 6 років тому +3

    Thank you for the video I enjoyed it beautiful job well done I'm planning to get Hayward stove when I move to PA 👍👍👍

  • @englishvietnamesewithmimi6983
    @englishvietnamesewithmimi6983 5 років тому +1

    Good video, good tips. Thanks

  • @Lewisusa11
    @Lewisusa11 5 років тому +1

    A nice pellet stove eliminates ALL of that hassle. I have a Fisher Mamma Bear stove and it cooks me out of my living room on a regular basis. I kick myself every winter for leaving my new pellet stove in the house I sold during divorce. 40lb bag of pellets heats for a couple of days leaving a tablespoon of ash. I absolutely hate having to collect, stack, transport and then CONSTANTLY add wood to keep the stove going. Love the wood heat, and wish my Mamma Bear had a glass door. Great video, and I will subscribe. Mamma Bear was in the house when I bought it, and have only had to replace the fire brick as many were missing or broken. I plan to repaint the stove this summer, and need to get up and brush the pipe as I have not done that, and this is my 3rd winter. Though I don't use stove exclusively, try to keep propane use down due to the cost of propane.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      Having the right size stove for your house is very important. Also having a way to circulate the heat keeps fairly even temperature throughout the house. I like having the window also. I used pellets in my last garage and would never use a pellet stove again after the shortage of pellets that happened one year. Thanks for watching and subbing.

  • @dadandlokiinthewoods8806
    @dadandlokiinthewoods8806 4 роки тому +1

    Love it. We burn mostly wood here in western new York. This year we started burning coal and wood both. The heat is perfect. Gas or oil would cost us triple to heat our 3500 sqft home.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  4 роки тому

      It's definitely a greaway to heat. With oil at almost $3.00 a gallon here now it is a big savings. Thanks for watching.

  • @paullarnce2167
    @paullarnce2167 5 років тому

    Loved your video! Down to earth and practical. No rocket science involved. TX

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      Thanks. Just keep the chimney clean and burn seasoned wood for a trouble free experience. Thanks for watching.

  • @vikingnorm6935
    @vikingnorm6935 Рік тому +1

    I used a regular chimney brush my entire life, well a fiberglass pole broke a few years back, then 2 years ago another, I ordered the kind you stay on the ground & run it up to top of chimney & your drill spins it, plastic balls attached to nylon ropes, like 1 1/2 - 2 inch balls, plus nylon brushes following behind them, as the bash the walls of the flu liner the brushes clean it, boy, I thought it was a gimmick, it’s SO MUCH CLEANER than when I used the old style, was only like $40 on Amazon

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  Рік тому

      My brush and poles are about 13 years old now and still look like new. Perfectly shiny chimney every time using it. I don’t imagine its good to beat this triple wall stainless chimney with something like that . Thanks for watching.

    • @vikingnorm6935
      @vikingnorm6935 Рік тому

      @@unemployedredneckhillbilly2023 it’s not a stainless liner, it’s the red ones, like ceramic

  • @Lanninglongarmmowing
    @Lanninglongarmmowing 6 років тому +4

    That's a modified army truck. They are so cool. I got to ride in one one time. It's huge and gets less than 10 miles to a gallon of diesel if I remember correctly. Lol. It's quite a head turner also. You've got quite a nice place.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +1

      They have about 6 of them converted to get the potatoes out of the muck fields. I think each load is 10 tons of potatoes. Before they fixed our road there was a bump in front of our house and every day I would pick up a couple pounds of potatoes that bounced out. Muck potatoes are sweet like sugar when first picked. Thanks for watching.

    • @donvanco3078
      @donvanco3078 6 років тому +6

      lol - I'd be "re-installing" that bump every fall....

  • @carmendee6481
    @carmendee6481 5 років тому +2

    So beautiful! I’ve always wanted a wood burning stove.

  • @shaunpower4868
    @shaunpower4868 6 років тому +1

    Excellent video.Somebody who knows what the are talking about.Nice home too.Thanks.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      Thanks. It takes a little work and planning to heat with wood but I feel it is well worth it . Thanks for watching.

  • @bigb147
    @bigb147 6 років тому +1

    Love this video. Very easy to watch and explained well. Would love to come and have a coffee in front of that stove.

  • @daveroberts6884
    @daveroberts6884 5 років тому +1

    Great tips. Nicely done video. Sounds like you might need to pump out that old oil tank and go to a smaller tank.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      I have been changing filters often and so far it is still burning . Hopefully I can use most of it this year. Thanks for watching.

  • @bigjim5723
    @bigjim5723 6 років тому

    our new house we installed a oil boiler-we have spent over $30,000 since 2003. it sucks lol for sure-especially at our old house we had coal heat-hot air. it was installed in 1962-was my home place-and then i bought it off my dad in 85. we got away for the winter there for less than $300 for coal. wood was free and i cut it myself. here i have been insulating the attic better, still have the basement wall that is out of the ground. i got sick in 2012 and haven't been able to work since-so money is tight now. good video. glad u can save on the oil for sure.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      The scary thing about oil is how the price fluctuates. One year it is $5.00 a gallon, & the next year it is $2.00. I wish we had natural gas available because the price of that seems pretty stable. Thanks for watching.

    • @bigjim5723
      @bigjim5723 6 років тому +1

      yes-i worked with a fella who lived near town-and his natural gas was piped right into his house-jeepers what a difference in his price compared to what i was spending on oil at the time. we have been getting away with roughly 1 and 3/4 tanks of oil since the attic was done over. if i had the one wall done int eh basement-i could probably lose some gallons. i filled up this yr at $1.59-its now close to $2-so in January it probably will be $2.50 a gal.

  • @m3rdpwr
    @m3rdpwr 6 років тому +16

    I had a similar Vermont Casting Stove all piped in nice when I bought the house.
    Wife didn't like it, so I removed it and gave it away.
    Big Mistake.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +3

      Lucky my wife likes ours. Actually she tends it most of the time. Thanks for watching.

    • @m3rdpwr
      @m3rdpwr 6 років тому +1

      Yeah, we rarely used ours.
      The previous home-owner rebuilt the fireplace, a brick landing just for this, etc.
      Oh well. lol

    • @jimbol8695
      @jimbol8695 6 років тому +10

      You got rid of the stove or the wife?

    • @m3rdpwr
      @m3rdpwr 6 років тому +7

      You mean I had a choice?!

    • @786otto
      @786otto 6 років тому +3

      Yes ,get rid of her soonest possible what aver it costs!

  • @uncleredneck3802
    @uncleredneck3802 5 років тому +1

    Love a good wood stove. Nothing better than the smell of a good fier. I miss the days when I was the "Automatic Wood Spliter". With 20# mall and Steele wedges. Oh I did not see your new truck when standing on the roof. Hope you and your famely had a merry Christmas and I look forward to seeing your videos in 2019.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      It is a great way to heat if you have the time. I used a maul for the first year and it just took too long so I built a splitter to speed things up. That truck is well worth the payments, it is the best vehicle I have ever owned with no problems yet. Happy New Year to you and your family. Thanks for watching.

  • @vihuelamig
    @vihuelamig 5 років тому +1

    I think the ashes mixed with water produces a lye, which is a fairly strong alkali, hence why it's effective at cleaning.

  • @lordviciousswede6148
    @lordviciousswede6148 4 роки тому +1

    Nice lawn too!

  • @hooper4581
    @hooper4581 5 років тому +1

    Outstanding

  • @jason-white
    @jason-white 6 років тому +1

    Another amazing, informative video. I would love to heat with wood. always look forward to your videos.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      It is a little work so if you have the time and a source for wood it is a great way to heat. Thanks for watching.

  • @rozchristopherson648
    @rozchristopherson648 5 років тому +1

    Very nice video! 👍

  • @stephensmith3181
    @stephensmith3181 5 років тому +1

    Very good installation I have installed a few jotul stoves for my company in the U K

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      It has been a great stove and the perfect size for our house. With the after burner they burn very clean for a woodstove. Thanks for watching.

  • @frankhuerta68
    @frankhuerta68 5 років тому +1

    Thank you for taking the time to share some great tips. My wife thinks you look like a cute Santa Claus on the roof!! 😊🚂

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      Heading up there today to clean the chimney for the start of this year's heating season. Santa likes big chimneys 🎅. Thanks for watching.

  • @loyalty271
    @loyalty271 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you for the information, and for sharing also, I just move into a house that has a woodstove, but I’m afraid to use it because I never had one before.

  • @mmanut
    @mmanut 6 років тому +1

    If you go with propane it might be a good idea to get a 1000 gallon tank, bury it in the yard. You can get a great deal on propane if you buy it off season and by volume. 1000 gallons would last for years. Doesn’t go bad. Just a thought. My brother did it and loves it. Vinny 🇺🇸

  • @anthonyawayagain
    @anthonyawayagain 5 років тому +2

    GOOOOD Info, thank you Brother.....Amen

  • @CenterTree777
    @CenterTree777 5 років тому +2

    7:23 Also, you can try FUME-FREE OVEN CLEANER spray on the glass. Just spray, let it set for a few minutes and wipe it right off. Then regular windex will clean off any oven cleaner residue for a nice clear glass.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      The ash is free, works good and doesn't waste packaging even with the hot glass it works. The other option is a good hot fire that vaporized the creosote off the glass. The glass is always very hot once the heating season starts and I am not sure oven cleaner should be applied to a hot surface. Thanks for watching.

  • @paulchoate1
    @paulchoate1 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you. Great video and info! (Who disliked this vid?!).

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks. I bet it was lazy people that like to just turn up a thermostat with no work involved. Thanks for watching.

  • @mynextketchfrontier6351
    @mynextketchfrontier6351 5 років тому +1

    Nice ...clip love the fire burning bathing beats wood as heat..thnx

  • @jasonk4855
    @jasonk4855 5 років тому +1

    Excellent video and the property looks great very much to be proud of. Just a consideration but might want to reconsider blocking the windows with the woods stack. Could be costly in the event of an emergency.

  • @mimi2-3
    @mimi2-3 6 років тому +1

    I miss the wood heat! I grew up in a house heated with it. Miss country living period! Miss the canning and storage of food!! Live in the city in a small apartment:-(. If you are looking for someone to adopt I’m your volunteer!! New subscriber here! Love the videos I’ve seen! 👍🏻👍🏻 God bless

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      I often wonder when the day will come for us that we have to downsize. Always plenty to eat. Thanks for watching.

  • @burtvhulberthyhbn7583
    @burtvhulberthyhbn7583 6 років тому +2

    Jotul's are the Mercedes Benz of wood stoves. My 600 takes wood maybe 2 inches longer than your 500. They just turn the crappiest wood into a perfect flame and they'll heat all night long too.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      This has been a great stove. As long as you feed it properly dried wood it burns very clean. That reburner really works good. Thanks for watching.

  • @trollforge
    @trollforge 6 років тому +1

    That stove is gorgeous brother!

  • @davidliles87
    @davidliles87 4 роки тому +1

    Good job thanks

  • @joreldeleon8848
    @joreldeleon8848 6 років тому +6

    I would be concerned about termites when putting all that wood up against the house.

  • @joylouise5417
    @joylouise5417 6 років тому +1

    New subscriber, really enjoying your videos. Thanks for the tip about cleaning the glass with wood ash.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      It is the only natural cleaner we found that works on that soot. Thanks for watching and subscribing.

    • @russse2793
      @russse2793 6 років тому

      That was an awesome tip, and it is free.

  • @johncourtneidge
    @johncourtneidge 5 років тому +1

    Thank-you and best!

  • @donvanco3078
    @donvanco3078 6 років тому +1

    My brother (in Ohio) heats his house with a wood burning furnace. Standard forced-fan style - just has a burner box instead of the typical oil/gas burners!

  • @drrussdc
    @drrussdc 5 років тому +1

    Currently I use 20 cords a year for an outdoor boiler system. It would be great but our in floor radiant heat lines were installed by someone who didnt know what they were doing so it's very inefficient. Going to a wood stove this year as soon as I can get it in.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      Get a properly sized stove and I bet you will a lot less wood. We love the woodstove. Be sure to get all the proper permits so your insurance company will underwrite it.

  • @pamelaburks8695
    @pamelaburks8695 5 років тому +1

    Work as FP sales and cleaning service. Seems to know more than most people about wood stove care. Barly get customers let us clean them once a year. Chimney fires are scary.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому +1

      Cleaning the chimney a couple times a year and burning dry hardwood are required if you heat with wood. So many people don't realize the consequences of a creosote fire in a chimney. Thanks for watching.

  • @lostnation5348
    @lostnation5348 6 років тому +3

    I know burning wood can be a bit messy and sometimes a pain in the butt, but there still is nothing like having my morning coffee near the stove on a late fall or winter morning.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      The best part of waking up is that roaring morning fire. Takes a little work, but is well worth it. Thanks for watching.

  • @Rix284
    @Rix284 5 років тому +1

    Great video- love it.

  • @rstevewarmorycom
    @rstevewarmorycom 5 років тому +2

    Ash with oily resin from trees makes a simple soap!!! It's lye and potash, probably not an abrasive for tempered glass. Beautiful stove, a Joetl, how do you keep it looking so nice? Wire brush? Cleanser?

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      The wet ash is the easiest way to clean the glass and it doesn't require chemicals. We just wipe it with a damp cloth a couple times a year. Whatever they finished it with at the factory has stood up well. Thanks for watching.

  • @birdynumnum3473
    @birdynumnum3473 5 років тому +1

    Nicely done.

  • @markminister2599
    @markminister2599 4 роки тому +1

    Very helpful

  • @thehamlinwoodshop
    @thehamlinwoodshop 6 років тому +2

    Great video. Thank you!

  • @CharlieM1219
    @CharlieM1219 6 років тому +2

    Same here. Wood & propane beats electric bill & fuel oil Everytime.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +3

      I have to get rid of the oil, It does not age well. Propane seems my best choice also. Thanks for watching.

  •  5 років тому +1

    ah. you got a jøtul. almost everyone have a Jøtul in Norway. lol. ofcourse. they have many many many models and are an old stove fabric. :-) it lasts a lifetime or 3 :-)

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому

      It is an amazing woodstove. I see they have started making some in Maine in the USA now. Thanks for watching.

  • @ronaldloyd9662
    @ronaldloyd9662 6 років тому +4

    thank you , i have my great grandfathers wood stove from 1930 seqoua national park, time to fire it up.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому +1

      That must be a beauty. I am hoping we have 6 weeks before needing it this fall. Thanks for watching

    • @burtvhulberthyhbn7583
      @burtvhulberthyhbn7583 6 років тому

      Just went through Sequoia national Forest last week.
      Where's a photo of your stove?

  • @BreadAndGatorade
    @BreadAndGatorade 5 років тому +2

    THanks for the video :)

  • @tmo4330
    @tmo4330 5 років тому +1

    Nice place! Hickory=too much ashes and charcoal. Hackberry=almost no ashes. Most firewood in the U.S. is red oak. (i think)

  • @so4real
    @so4real 5 років тому

    You mentioned the oil in the tank jelling. I used to have oil heat. I was told you have to put a gallon of denature alcohol in the tank during winter months ( 1 gallon per 100 gallons) and your oil will never gel up again.

    • @robertl.fallin7062
      @robertl.fallin7062 5 років тому

      The winter of 76-77 was one of the coldest in US history with with several thousand deaths from the failure of heating systems. I got a wood burning stove and the next winter though nearly as cold, was much more bearable. You never know when internatiinal politics could make your life difficult as happened in 76-78 with heating oil and gas in short supply

  • @mikedickson2925
    @mikedickson2925 6 років тому +1

    Wood heat is some nice, especially when you can get wood either free or at a decent price. Many Urban dwellers are trying to put an end to it here in Canada. Many cities are bringing in by-laws to ban wood fires due to smoke. 'Magine that....

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      That stinks, people move in and try to change the neighborhood. That is why you move to the country. I heard that NY is trying to ban all outdoor wood fired boilers. Thanks for watching.

  • @augustreil
    @augustreil 5 років тому +1

    I know a lot of people with wood stoves and only one has had a chimney fire. I'm 53 and have been burning wood since I was born and only one person my entire family knows has had a chimney fire and the only thing that happened was the pipe was cleaned crystal clear !! I 'm not saying to not clean your pipe/flue but people have been conditioned to the point over the years that a chimney fire is like a Nuclear Explosion. It sounds like a freight train, that's all.
    Thumbs up on your video, great info sir !!

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  5 років тому +1

      We had one in our cabin when I was younger. Sounded like a 747 engine. The fire and embers were shooting 10 feet above the chimney. Lucky it was a cement block chimney and there was over a foot of snow on the roof or it would have burnt down. It was very scary standing outside watching it plus it was not an air tight stove so there was no way to slow it down. Better safe than sorry. Thanks for watching.

  • @frankburns8871
    @frankburns8871 6 років тому

    I have a fireplace insert. Nowhere near as efficient as a free-standing woodstove, but way better than a regular fireplace. I only need to kick on the fuel-oil burner occasionally to guard against the pipes in the basement freezing. Even in single digits F, it keeps the whole house in the mid-60s. If we want 70 or warmer, gotta kick on the furnace, but that's rare. Freaking chimney liner has a couple of 45 degree angles in it, though, so cleaning it is a royal PITA.

    • @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023
      @unemployedredneckhillbilly2023  6 років тому

      We have had extremely frigid weather the last week and the stove is keeping us nice and comfy. I can switch on my furnace blower to keep an even temp throughout the house. A great way to heat.

    • @frankburns8871
      @frankburns8871 6 років тому +1

      Yeah, we're having a record-setting streak of near-zero lows and "highs" in the teens here, too, thanks to global warming, er, climate change, or whatever we're supposed to be mindlessly regurgitating this week. Like 14 days or more where the highs don't even come close to freezing. I like writing a check to the local fuel oil company and throwing it into the firebox with every nicely seasoned split of wood. Good times.