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|  03-07-2017, 04:57 PM | #1 | 
| Junior Member Join Date: Mar 2017 Location: Merrymeeting Lake - New Durham 
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	 |  Pellet Stove Dealer recommendation 
			
			Hello neighbors- We are looking to put in a pellet stove, and am wondering if anyone here has experience with Fireside Living in Laconia? I've seen them mentioned a couple of times in these forums, and it seems that people have had a good experience with them. We've heard very good things about Energysavers in Meredith, but the stove that we're leaning toward is sold by Fireside Living. Any input on them would be appreciated. thanks very much, Joe New Durham | 
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|  03-07-2017, 05:03 PM | #2 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island 
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	 |   Quote: 
 Dan 
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| JoeR3155 (03-07-2017)  | ||
|  03-07-2017, 06:08 PM | #3 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2008 Location: Moultonborough 
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			If you haven't already seen this forum (https://www.hearth.com/talk/), they have a subforum covering pellet stoves. It probably is worth a visit, given your interest in them. I imagine the stove you want and others have been well covered there, and a search on it will turn up those threads.
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|  03-07-2017, 08:16 PM | #4 | |
| Junior Member Join Date: Mar 2017 Location: Merrymeeting Lake - New Durham 
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|  03-07-2017, 09:46 PM | #5 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2012 Location: Tuftonboro 
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			I bought mine last year down in Chichester from Abundant Life. Nice folks. I have a Harman in Tuftonboro and another Harman in rowley that has been going strong a dozen years with no problems.
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|  03-08-2017, 08:01 AM | #6 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: Gilford, NH 
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			I have a Harman P-68 and XXV that I bought from Fireside.  Great store, great support, very patient with all my questions.  The XXV is a pain in the arse to clean but the P-68 is a piece of cake.  Love them both though.
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|  03-08-2017, 08:41 AM | #7 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2004 Location: Eastern MA & Frye Island/Sebago Lake, Maine 
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			I have two Harman stoves. A P61A (2010) and an Invincible (1996). The Harman technology and quality far surpass most stoves on the market. You'll pay more but it's well worth it.
		 
				__________________ " Live for today because yesterday is gone and tomorrow may never come" | 
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|  03-08-2017, 08:53 AM | #8 | 
| Junior Member Join Date: May 2014 Location: Alton Bay,NH 
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			Chichester from Abundant Life.
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|  03-08-2017, 10:12 AM | #9 | 
| Junior Member Join Date: Mar 2017 Location: Merrymeeting Lake - New Durham 
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			Thank you all for your input - appreciate it!
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|  03-08-2017, 02:44 PM | #10 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2005 
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	 |  Harman P 43 owners 
			
			Can you tell me what sq footage you are heating with P 43?  Old or newer structure with good or poor insulation, airsealing ect.  I am asking because I just purchased, had professionally installed P 43 in a duplex style ski condo in Bartlett. Installed in open concept living room, dining room, kitchen (one room guessing 800 - 1000 sq feet) with master bedroom bath off of that room and then there is a staircase beside the stove for 2 bedrooms and bath upstairs and closed doors to upstairs bedrooms because not being used.  Total sq footage 1364.  There is no upstairs over the over master bedroom but there is a higher cathedral type ceiling in the master bedroom. 1st weekend last weekend, super cold and windy but it took what seemed to me a long time to get up to 65 - 70. Originally set at 70 but only got to 65, turned up to 75, only got up to 67. From Friday after install 12 noon to Sunday 10 am, used 3 bags of pellets and started 4th bag but most of that is left as left around 11 am. I don't think its that well insulated or sealed, built in 87 and probably not built that well but not spending money on that for ski weekends in winter only. Now wondering if should have went with P 61. Still trying to learn how to use it. | 
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|  03-08-2017, 04:34 PM | #11 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2005 
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	 |  Pelletts 
			
			While I'm at it will ask about what others are burning.  In North Conway area, the best pellets available (I think) are Cubex (hardwood), Okanagan (softwood), I bought just 10 bags Cubex to start but now thinking after reading further that softwood maybe a little better, seems from what I have been reading that would get more heat out of softwood.  Will buy a ton in off season for next winter but wondering if there is a decent product sold at say Lowes/Home Depot just in case I get stuck using up what I have and can not get more of the others near end of heating season if a ton does not last.  Don't want to buy more than a ton at a time since storage is tight.  Sounds like some of the pellets sold at big box stores are not that great but have also read Harmans will burn anything.
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|  03-08-2017, 05:10 PM | #12 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island 
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	 |   Quote: 
 The P-43 is rated for I believe a maximum of 2400 sq ft. so with me trying to fully heat 2900 sq ft just is not going to happen but it does supplement very nicely and keeps the main living areas and bedrooms right where we like it. Until the price of pellets comes down, your probably still currently better off financially burning oil than pellets unless the ambiance of the pellet heat is a preference. Regarding your heat and pellet usage....It sounds to me like you have a couple things going on. #1. It sounds like you may be getting a lot of air leakage from the exterior. If that's the case, yes you may have been better with the P61 as the P43 simply cant keep up with the inefficiency of your home. #2. I have found with the P-43 that running it on high all the time simply waste pellets and doesn't do much for extra heating and this is most likely true with any pellet stove. Usually burning a bag every 24 hours seems to be the right rate to optimize pellet usage and heat, at least with my P-43 stove. I am by no means an expert on pellet stoves and have only had one for a few years now but I am super impressed with the Harman P43 thus far! Dan 
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|  03-08-2017, 05:29 PM | #13 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2005 
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	 |  Harman 
			
			Yes, I am very new and also learning, its propane not oil, our propane is not priced too bad but the heating system is a bad design so the common room where the pellet stove is installed (replaced a wood stove) is for heating and making that area more comfortable.  Not so much for saving on propane. The bedrooms heat up nicely with furnace.  Even with my reservations about the P43 for this space it was still way better on a cold windy day to have pellet stove heating up the open room vs. furnace.  The wood stove was great once it was going but when you go to bed or go out to ski it would not keep running while we were out (no one to feed the wood) so decided to try the pellet stove.  That was nice because woke up Sunday and pellet stove still going where the wood stove would have stopped.
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|  03-08-2017, 07:54 PM | #14 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2005 
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	 |  Harman 
			
			IShoot308, I agree about the air leakage and I believe not well insulated.  unless I intend to insulate and air seal and don't at this time, been there done on primary residence, that issue can't be fixed. So on super cold weekend if i need too can turn up the furnace to take the edge off and use stove to supplement and keep as warm as possible, 67 not bad without any furnace use on a weekend as cold as last, should be ok on a normal winter weekend.
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|  03-09-2017, 06:45 AM | #15 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Welch Island and The Taylor Community 
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			We heat the 1st floor, about 1,050 sq ft, with the P43 using an average of 1 bag a day. May use 1.5 bags on the coldest windy days. With some heat going up the stairway, also a bit of help to heating the 2nd floor. Modern well insulated house.
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|  03-09-2017, 07:52 AM | #16 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2004 Location: Eastern MA & Frye Island/Sebago Lake, Maine 
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			Taz, you're asking a lot of that P43 especially as cold as it was last weekend. A pellet stove is a spaceheater and you have to keep that in mind. If you burned 3-4 bags in a day it sounds like you had that poor thing maxed out. What was the temp in the room when you started? You should set your feed rate at 4 and forget about ever adjusting it again. It is the most misunderstood setting on a Harman stove. Are you running Room Temp mode or Constant Burn? (used to be called Stove Temp). If you are running RT mode where is the room sensing probe located? I might be able to help you out a bit but more info is needed. Initially it sounds like you might be a bit undersized. There's a quantum leap from the P43 to the P61 and it's not just the 18K btus. As you've heard, a Harman will burn anything you want to put in it. The higher end pellets such as Cubex and Oakies are great but you don't have to spend that much if you don't want to. The BB stores sell decent stuff that will work just fine. You've bought the best stove money can buy. Hopefully with a few tweaks we can help you out. 
				__________________ " Live for today because yesterday is gone and tomorrow may never come" | 
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|  03-09-2017, 09:34 AM | #17 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2005 
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	 |  Blue thunder 
			
			Maybe I am expecting too much.  I realize its a spaceheater, knew that going in but I am only really trying to heat one common area (living room, kitchen, dining area) to comfortable temp 65 -70 and then what ever spills into the master bedroom is fine, don't want it 65 - 70 toasty in bedroom anyway, like it cool to sleep.  Given that P 43 is rated to heat 800 - 2400 sq feet and that one common room can not be more than 1000 sq feet, probably more like 800 I would think the stove could have reached 70 which it never did.  Now I realize it was cold, windy and maybe not the best insulated but it is insulated, that's been confirmed in walls and attic crawl spaces.  Feed rate was set at 4 and never changed it.  Friday after install it did reach 65 which is ok but it was set at 70 and it took what I thought was long time to get there, maybe 4 hours. Room temp started around 60 - 61 before stove started.  Saturday tried turning up to 75 and it did reach 67 but again took awhile.  Not sure what you mean by maxed out, it was no where near set at the highest temp setting, fan not much more than half way, was in temp mode.  Dealer recommended trying stove mode (constant burn) for most of winter and using temp mode for shoulder season heating.  Will try stove mode this weekend and play around with it.  Don't get me wrong, it ran like I think it was suppose to just felt it should have reached a higher temp sooner.   The dealer was great with answering questions and install but was alittle disappointed with not talking up more about buying the bigger stove since he said he has completed many installs in this development which are all layed out identical and knows these units well. | 
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|  03-07-2017, 06:52 PM | #18 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Sep 2008 Location: Meredith Bay & LI, NY 
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	 |   Quote: 
 Dan if you don't mind me asking, how much was it? I am also interested. Sent from my iPhone using Winnipesaukee Forum mobile app | |
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|  03-07-2017, 07:04 PM | #19 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Welch Island and The Taylor Community 
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			Yes, Fireside Living and a Harman P43 stove. Sitting by one right now.   | 
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|  03-07-2017, 07:21 PM | #20 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Gilford, NH / Welch Island 
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	 |   Quote: 
 I bought the same stove (P-43) as Slickcraft so maybe he has a better memory on price... Dan 
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|  03-07-2017, 07:32 PM | #21 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Welch Island and The Taylor Community 
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	 |   Quote: 
 Alan | |
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| joey2665 (03-07-2017)  | ||
|  03-07-2017, 07:56 PM | #22 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Sep 2008 Location: Meredith Bay & LI, NY 
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	 |   Quote: 
 Thanks Alan and Dan I appreciate it. Sent from my iPhone using Winnipesaukee Forum mobile app | |
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|  03-09-2017, 10:44 AM | #23 | 
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: Alton Bay 
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			I heat with wood and about 8 years ago, we'd decided to replace our Fisher cast iron stove.  We ended up getting a Hearthstone soapstone unit.  While researching stoves and talking with various salesmen, most asked a second question regarding the area to be heated : how high are your ceilings? Our living room has a ceiling that is about 9 ft high. This area is somewhat of an open concept, with the ceiling dropping down to about 7.5 ft.this drop down traps air near the ceiling. Also the house is poorly insulated, generating heat loss. Their concern was the volume of air that would have to be heated before it made it down to our sitting level, if you will. They did make the suggestion to over-size the stove and to add a circular fan in the living room. I actually belief the latter was better than the former. With the fan direction set at blowing up, the warm air at the ceiling blows up then out and down, a nice gentle flow of warm air. Even when starting up the stove after having been away for hours, or days, once the stove is lit and up to temp, I can start the fan and get that flow of warm air moving down. It is a Hunter fan, cost about $250 as I remember it, and I was able to install it myself. Nice way to alleviate the physics of warm air rises. I know this is a lot of explanation to say I fear you too may be victim of high ceilings and trying to heat that space. Sent from my GT-P5210 using Winnipesaukee Forum mobile app 
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