Heating Effect Nedita Heaters
About The Heating Effects Of Our Stoves
When firing a Blucomb genuine soapstone stove, imported by NEDITA LLC, the following applies:
- About 80-90% of the heat from the fire is retained in the stone, and radiated into the room over time. The remaining 10-20% is radiated through the windows during burning. The more windows a stove has, the more is transmitted in this way.
- The larger the model variant, the fiercer one can fire before overfiring. One should fire with approximately 6-7 lbs of dry wood per firing.
- When firing with six hours intervals a Nedita gives an output of 3000 btu/h on average, ranging between 1700 to 7000 btu/h.
- When firing three times right after each other one will reach an output into the room of 20.000-27.000 btu/h, depending on the size of the stove. This will taper down to about 1700 btu/h in about 10-12 hours.
- Larger stoves can easily be fired 5 times in a row. The smallest variants we recommend to fire not more than 3 times in a row to avoid efficiency losses.
- For a house build after 1990 with reasonable insulation one stove can heat about 1000-1500 ft2. The heating intensity is regulated by adjusted the heating intervals. In most cases heating 3-4 times per day is enough.