Dwarf Tiny Wood Stove - Lighting & Usage

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  • Опубліковано 23 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 122

  • @GarmiOffgrid
    @GarmiOffgrid  27 днів тому +2

    A quick message to all the would-be commenters. This video is about my experience and general know-how (and opinion) on how to size and operate a woodstove. Specifically a Dwarf Tiny Woodstove. This video is not however saying a wood stove is the best/only type of heating source. If you’re after the aesthetic, charm and use-enjoyment that a woodstove brings, then this video applies to you. Also I mis-spoke a time or three calling it 3000kw. Its 3kw(or 3000w) equivalent energy output.

  • @jK-yj2tl
    @jK-yj2tl 8 місяців тому +6

    Thanks for the tinywoodstove link and review.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  8 місяців тому +2

      You’re welcome! I hope it was helpful and informative

  • @andrebrandao9451
    @andrebrandao9451 2 місяці тому +5

    This video turned out to be way more instructive that I was expecting. Thank you.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  2 місяці тому

      You’re very welcome! Expect more videos this fall and winter

  • @stephenjunker670
    @stephenjunker670 8 місяців тому +2

    Great video, just right zone. Tiny Stoves should sponsor you.

  • @Lee-mmg
    @Lee-mmg 2 місяці тому +6

    I have friends with a saw mill - lots of available wood for free. And shopping for a tiny stove. My gosh - expensive! We have "take off"! Whatever works for a person and their stove. :-) No use for coal here. I used wood burner to heat home for 40-50 years. Miss it and now I am in teensy tiny "cottage" and going back to wood for heat.

  • @GailMatthis
    @GailMatthis Місяць тому +1

    I added your video to my building guides playlist. I have some land up north and I am building my own cottage. I need that little stove. So, thank you.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      Thanks for watching! If you like my content please use my TinyWoodStove affiliate link if/when you purchase 🙏

  • @Leggobrandon40bang
    @Leggobrandon40bang Місяць тому +3

    I don't worry about creosote. I clean my flutes before each years first light. Id rather have it a little smokey and burn longer. Preferably all night without having to relight

  • @DianneLarouche
    @DianneLarouche Місяць тому +1

    Looks like a perfect cute little stove. Firewood pieces are so cute!

  • @mogmichi300
    @mogmichi300 Місяць тому +2

    In Germany we use primary, secondary and window cleaning air since more than 20years. Less smoke and more heat. 👍🏻

  • @TheTrainstation
    @TheTrainstation 6 днів тому +1

    Excellent choice of music commrade general

  • @deepsouthNZ
    @deepsouthNZ 3 дні тому

    Great stove mate it sure looks the part. You can also make them using propane tanks and you dont even need to weld.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  3 дні тому +1

      Yep I’ve heard of that, thanks for watching!

  • @TheYeti308
    @TheYeti308 24 дні тому

    Yes ; With those big stoves , i too have had spiritual experiences before .

  • @volvosan
    @volvosan 3 місяці тому +2

    I picked up a Hobbit tiny cast iron wood stove a few years ago & it's been great - a tiny lttle tank which takes 6-7" wood & weighs in at an astronishing 110 ibs. Problem is, there is only one North American distributor, and they are in the Northwest, & supply is very limited (stoves made in Southeast England). It's perfect for my well insulated 200 sq. ft. cabin. Thanks for the video.

    • @iamnothingwithouthim
      @iamnothingwithouthim 2 місяці тому

      I heard that they stink. Even after 40hrs of burning and after 40hrs they stink if burning at high temperature.

    • @yuriseresin2450
      @yuriseresin2450 2 місяці тому +2

      @@iamnothingwithouthim That's not been my experience. I fired it up outdoors first - being careful to slowly increase temp. & then burn it hot for a few hours. Burned lots of diff. woodstoves since college & our double barrel - Jotul to Chappee (coal/wood) to catalytic American ones, & can appreciate this Hobbit. Cast iron grate means it's easy to remove ashes, even when running, & easy to start a fire. And being so heavy = extended release of heat after fire is out.

    • @stephenbaker3680
      @stephenbaker3680 Місяць тому

      ?Stink? Well if u use rotten wood..yeah! Stinky-poo!!

  • @8Pointbuck
    @8Pointbuck 9 днів тому

    This is how I light a real cold woodstove. I mean you can feel the down draft coming out of the front of the stove.
    The first 3 ft. of flew is a single wall steel black stove pipe of which before I light the fire box I heat the steel pipe coming out of the stove top with a propane torch all around the base and up as far as 2 ft. for about a minute then light the kindling which I also prime with kerosene. Works even at -25 degrees and colder.
    Best torch for this is a Benzomatic TS4000 or bigger.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  9 днів тому +1

      Great advice. Maybe I will try that at some point. I definitely think it helps that most of my flue is inside. I have a tall ceiling. Check out my latest video where I get it going a different way. Seems the end result is the same, but I continue to experiment.

  • @jimsteele7108
    @jimsteele7108 18 днів тому

    The one thing that works really well for me for starting a fire without filling the room with smoke is to open up a window to get the draft to move up the chimney. Try that next time and see if it works for you.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  18 днів тому +1

      I had a house once where that did the exact opposite unfortunately. Had a lot of issues with that fireplace tho. Even after having chimney experts clean it and add a wind/rain shield or whatever on top. I’m finding so far with this little stove that I don’t get any smoke in the space. I think it helps that most of my flue is inside and already warmer than outside. I just light it and it goes right up. I think having the dedicated cold air intake helps tremendously as well.

    • @jimsteele7108
      @jimsteele7108 18 днів тому

      @ interesting

  • @johnlogan4053
    @johnlogan4053 24 дні тому

    Also i would install a damper on the stove pipe above the stove about 16-24 inches. Besides controling your burn it's a good idea incase of a chimney fire.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  24 дні тому

      I can choke off the stove by closing all the dampers on the stove itself. Happens pretty quick. Doesn’t that do the same thing?

    • @johnlogan4053
      @johnlogan4053 24 дні тому

      @GarmiOffgrid the damper helps keep the heat from escaping up the flue .so it stays in the stove instead of going out of the flue pipe.

  • @glorgau
    @glorgau 8 місяців тому +1

    Seems like something to optimize the airflow for burning would be a fun arduino based project.

  • @scottiegreen1450
    @scottiegreen1450 Місяць тому

    I've got the 4kw stove and installed it in January. It's in my 32ft camper and it stays toasty.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      That’s awesome! Thanks for watching

  • @johnlogan4053
    @johnlogan4053 24 дні тому +1

    You could remove the side panels you will increase the output .the side panels are heat shields so stove can be closer to combustibles. In your installation they aren't needed. Try it to see if it makes a difference.if not you can just put them back on.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  24 дні тому +1

      Ok i might try that. Just went on the advice of Tinywoodstove and wanted to keep my walls pine. Though i am having zero issues with it heating up. That little stove heats the space quick! Plus almost my entire flue is inside. Almost went out the wall.

  • @briannagorman3119
    @briannagorman3119 Місяць тому

    Nice demonstration. Nice stove too

  • @madnessintomagic
    @madnessintomagic 8 місяців тому +2

    Thanks! Learned a lot. But awwww. You missed the opportunity to say “and just slide the bin back in to the ash hole”….

  • @fayiznalu8411
    @fayiznalu8411 25 днів тому

    Nice demonstration 😊

  • @magesalmanac6424
    @magesalmanac6424 21 день тому

    It’s cute, it’s cozy, what’s not to love?

  • @stephenbaker3680
    @stephenbaker3680 Місяць тому

    Hahah! Bells & whistle stove Jay Leno'd love to baby sit😅. Nice sturdy lil bugar though.

  • @CraigMomoney-od8ec
    @CraigMomoney-od8ec Місяць тому +2

    I built mine based on all the mini stoves. When you're old and get up to pee midnight...you just throw im a couple pices and it will burn all night. Its big enough to heat my shipping container house.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      Yeah I don’t mind adding wood at night and if you’re well insulated you might not even have to. That’s what Ive found so far.

  • @ric889
    @ric889 20 днів тому

    I put a tea kettle full of water on top to help prevent dry skin.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  20 днів тому +1

      Thanks for watching! Yes we may do that at some point if it dries out a lot

  • @johncurtis1472
    @johncurtis1472 Місяць тому +1

    You need to get a dwarf to cut wood that small ❤❤

  • @Cacheola
    @Cacheola 8 місяців тому +2

    None of these tiny cheap stoves seem to dampen the air well, or you guys just don't know how nor realize the benefit. I like the look of this Dwarf, seems a proper cold air intake and good design. But can you actually turn it down to a dull roar? That is the burning question ;)

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  8 місяців тому +2

      This is definitely not a cheap stove. Extremely well-made and the air controls are awesome. You can dampen it down to the point where you kill the fire no problem. The unit is very well sealed. But I wouldn’t recommend dampening it too far because then you’re giving prime conditions for creosote.

    • @Cacheola
      @Cacheola 8 місяців тому

      @@GarmiOffgridNice! Thanks for that. I've got an email into 'tiny wood stoves' asking what the difference is between the 3k and the lite. I don't need all the makeup air and glass vent gizmos. There's a 20lb difference which is significant. I'm wanting one on my sailboat in the PNW, cheers

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  8 місяців тому +2

      @Cacheola Killer, I’m glad if I could help in any way. If you decide to purchase from them I would appreciate it greatly if you use my affiliate link to visit their site. 🙏 Unfortunately I can’t give you a discount but I get a small kickback from them for spreading the word about their awesome product.

    • @Cacheola
      @Cacheola 8 місяців тому +1

      @@GarmiOffgrid100%. You've been the only sane person that's reviewed a small stove out of the dozen plus I've watched, lol. I like the heat shields you've got. Hoping the lite model isn't a thinner gauge steel and I'll most likely pull the trigger

    • @Cacheola
      @Cacheola 8 місяців тому

      @@GarmiOffgrid toss the useless thermostats, burn good quality seasoned wood and dampen away. Get a good ripper going in the morning to burn off any creosote. Clean your chimney at least once a year.

  • @Everydayheresy
    @Everydayheresy Місяць тому

    Goldeneye music = instant sub

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому +1

      Haha! Good ear

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      Check out what one guy said today about it! Complete opposite comment 😂

    • @Everydayheresy
      @Everydayheresy Місяць тому

      Just saw, lmao

  • @artigane51
    @artigane51 Місяць тому

    realy great information thank you

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      You’re very welcome! Thanks for watching

  • @jenniferstewarts4851
    @jenniferstewarts4851 Місяць тому

    Honestly, with the short burn times I'd either have a backup heater, diesel for example set to kick on if temp drops below a set temp... or one of the nano pellet stoves, 2.6 kw but the hoppers can hold 24h of pellets

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому +1

      Thanks for watching! We really wanted a woodstove but anything bigger would’ve been too much. We also have a Mr. buddy. I use a gasoline heater in my van and I love that thing!

    • @jenniferstewarts4851
      @jenniferstewarts4851 Місяць тому +1

      @@GarmiOffgrid yep. The little wood stoves are great for daytime heat when you can feed then while doing other things. Can even cook, bake, or hook water tanks to them. Side mounting oven is useful. The only flaw is short burn times and very low thermal mass

    • @Nomaswearefull
      @Nomaswearefull 29 днів тому

      Or a real wood stove

    • @jenniferstewarts4851
      @jenniferstewarts4851 29 днів тому +1

      @@Nomaswearefull in that small a size, a larger wood stove would be to hot. 150000 btu in a space that only needs 6000 btu

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  28 днів тому

      @@Nomaswearefull thank you for your comment. Can you send me a link to direct me to your video where you explain why a real stove (assuming you me off the shelf giant stove) would work well in a tiny space. Much appreciated!

  • @heathboeddeker5401
    @heathboeddeker5401 27 днів тому

    I would perfer a rocket mass heater for a tiny house instead of something like this. The benfit of steady geat thru the night after the fire dies out makes more sense to me

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  27 днів тому

      Thanks for watching! I am finding that my insulation is so good that I only lose about 10 maybe 15° overnight when it’s in the 30s outside. I’ll have to look into the rocket mass heater just for my own knowledge. That said, this video is purely for people who want to know about wood stoves specifically, and want a wood stove for the appeal and aesthetic they provide.

  • @iamnothingwithouthim
    @iamnothingwithouthim 2 місяці тому

    Would this stove be sufficient for smaller camper van in minus 30 degree weather? Can the flue freeze? How can you prevent pipe from freezing?
    Cheers!

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  2 місяці тому

      Should be more than sufficient. And I believe the smallest dwarf stove comes in a variant that a lot of people put in camper vans. I think it has less weight or something. Regarding flue freezing, can you elaborate?.
      If you decide to buy please use one of my affiliate links 🙏. It would be greatly appreciated 😊

  • @jamescole3152
    @jamescole3152 Місяць тому

    What type of insulation do you have in the walls? Looks like Rockwool or similar.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      Its Cornings version of rockwool

  • @madnessintomagic
    @madnessintomagic 8 місяців тому

    Did you figure this out based on using it and experimenting, or research and tiny stove instructions?

  • @GoddessTime-tg8bd
    @GoddessTime-tg8bd 15 днів тому

    Well I got to say that absolutely made me laugh when you couldn’t get the lighter lit and what you attached to it😂😂😂😂

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  15 днів тому

      Haha all my videos are full of that stuff if you like that kind of humor 😂 thanks for watching!

  • @letitiamccann1317
    @letitiamccann1317 5 місяців тому

    Hi cant find link love your video from Scotland

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  5 місяців тому

      www.tinywoodstove.com/ref/49

  • @johnlogan4053
    @johnlogan4053 24 дні тому +1

    If you put a porcelain tile wall behind the stove .it will reflect the heat into the living area.

  • @therika01
    @therika01 2 місяці тому

    Around here we call it an "upside-down fire"...

  • @mitchellwilson975
    @mitchellwilson975 20 днів тому

    Wait. HOW do you get a chimney fire?!

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  20 днів тому +1

      Creosote builds up in your chimney or flue. It’s like a black cake that clogs and is flamable. That’s why you have to clean your chimney occasionally. But watching how you use a fireplace or stove, you can minimize how much creosote builds up. Things like avoiding burning wet wood and allowing your wood to smolder or stove not burn at the optimum temp.

    • @mitchellwilson975
      @mitchellwilson975 20 днів тому

      @GarmiOffgrid is it better for the stove to be too cool or too hot, as far as creosote goes?

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  20 днів тому

      I would say on the hot end. Or the “just right” zone according to a gauge. If you let your stove burn out of control and get too hot then you start causing other problems and can actually cause damage to your stove.

  • @ErnestDionne
    @ErnestDionne 12 днів тому

    I cram my stove full then hit it with a snap torch for 45 seconds and your good

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  12 днів тому

      Yes! Actually that’s what I’ve been doing this season so far. I plan to release a couple more videos showcasing different ways to light the stove. Inevitably I seem to end up putting in more wood and packing it more than I do in the beginning. So the result is always the same. It’s just how I start it that seems to change. I don’t know if ill stop using the mini torch at this point though 😁

  • @canada233
    @canada233 Місяць тому +1

    Open a window for down drafts.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      Please elaborate what you’re saying

  • @makaylaforbes6719
    @makaylaforbes6719 Місяць тому

    That tiny stove holds a shocking amount of wood

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      I can’t tell if that’s sarcasm or not 😂

  • @dogbreath9876
    @dogbreath9876 9 днів тому

    what does it cost to buy one

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  9 днів тому

      Just one kidney! Haha check out the link in the description. Cost depends what size you buy and what parts you need to get the flue out the roof. Then you get what you pay for. These are solid units.

  • @Mpcjm765
    @Mpcjm765 8 місяців тому

    Where do i get one????

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  8 місяців тому

      There’s a link in the video description and on my profile description

  • @GerardLachapelle
    @GerardLachapelle Місяць тому

    I have one and try charcoal at nite it last longer i make mi onwne charcoal

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      I was tempted to try at some point. Thanks for watching

  • @tatonkaowner
    @tatonkaowner 2 місяці тому

    I looking for pricing

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  2 місяці тому

      Click the link in the description for this video

  • @308dad8
    @308dad8 24 дні тому

    3 thousand thousand watt? Are you certain you’re not saying it wrong to evoke a reaction? If it’s only 3000 watts it’s the 3KW or three kilo watt. You are claiming in the wrong language that it produces heat in the electricity range of 3 megawatts.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  24 дні тому +1

      Thanks for watching. Yep good catch. I realized a while back that I misspoke a couple times.. I do know that 3kw means 3000 watts etc. Need to be more careful on the nomenclature ;). Unfortunately I don’t think I can edit my video after it’s already been uploaded long ago. I do also think its odd the manufacturer speaks in terms of watts rather than BTU. Im sure they have some good reason.

  • @TheNewMediaoftheDawn
    @TheNewMediaoftheDawn 6 днів тому

    It’s a nice stove and you can boil water on top, I’m sure you know, and power a small turbine generator to a battery with that fan…

  • @markduncan6690
    @markduncan6690 Місяць тому

    I Would Never Burn Coal!

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      I probably never will either, but I’m told it’s capable. Thanks for watching!

  • @GreenlifeFin
    @GreenlifeFin Місяць тому +1

    You two bottom wood pieces are too far away from eachother.
    This is an interesting stove for a tiny house.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому +1

      Thanks for watching! I’m still adjusting how and where I put wood pieces. Those pieces had no trouble lighting and I likely added more in the middle after a while of burning. It was just a demonstration of the idea. Definitely lots of room for variation in methods, with the same overall result.

    • @GreenlifeFin
      @GreenlifeFin Місяць тому +1

      @@GarmiOffgrid yeah, I understand, my comment maybe sounded a bit harsh, sorry. I lived in an old house heated with wood for several years, so the gap in the beginning just grabbed my attention. Later I noticed you had added wood and it really burned well.
      Do you think this owen would heat a tiny house of about 12 m2? I think yes, easily too warm.
      How long goes the cast iron store the heat?

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому +1

      Yes it would! And they make different sizes. And the iron stays warm for a while. The bricks help a lot im sure

  • @stephenbaker3680
    @stephenbaker3680 Місяць тому

    YaKNOW!!?..WHY oh WHY dont I just have a bunch of uniformley cut wood logs to feed an automatic LOG feeder stove?! Why should pricey funky PELLet stoves have all THAT fun?! Rig up a grandfather clock type mechanizm to sloooooleeey plunk one or two logs in every so many minutes..with a thermostatic speed regulator. I can picture loading up the thing like HEEUUGEah Tommey gun circular spiral looking thing rigged to the grandfather clock windup deal..Oh!..Hm-Hm-Hm!..aHA-HA😂😂

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому

      Lol! Now that’s thinking with your dipstick

  • @Poncho758
    @Poncho758 Місяць тому

    Yeah, who’s got time to cut your wood into 6 inch pieces give me a break. What time you spend cutting your wood into 6 inch pieces and then doing the killing to start no thanks

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому +1

      Thanks for watching! The pros outweigh the cons in a tiny house. You can’t just slap a giant full-size house stove in a small space and expect the same result. That’s why these little stoves exist. So it’s either don’t enjoy a woodstove in a small space, or suffer trying with something too big. Oh and it doesn’t take that much time to cut pieces or deal with kindling.

  • @THerd-um5tl
    @THerd-um5tl Місяць тому

    Great vid and info. Almost didn't watch because of the horriblly obnoxious soundbed on the front end. Please don't make us suffer through that drivel on future vids or I won't be here.

    • @GarmiOffgrid
      @GarmiOffgrid  Місяць тому +3

      Thanks for watching! Actually almost all of my videos have (at some point throughout) some obnoxious sound drivel. I like music in my videos and I would say that has to be pretty common on UA-cam?

    • @jeffreyrmiller
      @jeffreyrmiller Місяць тому +4

      I say cry about it! It was only a little bit of intro music. You sir, sound like a blast at parties🎉

    • @Everydayheresy
      @Everydayheresy Місяць тому +1

      Uncultured behavior, lol

  • @Roger-x1f3e
    @Roger-x1f3e 15 днів тому

    Yea 007 lol