Interesting Video on Harman Pellet Stoves


Here is a video that is interesting that gives information on Harman Pellet stoves.

Pellet stoves are growing in popularity as heating fuel costs rise.

 

Duration : 0:10:0

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How Pellets Are Made


Wood pellets, the fuel for pellet stoves is made of highly compressed sawdust. This sawdust is mostly recovered from industries such as lumber and furniture manufacturers, and must be free from glues or additives. This recycling process diverts tons of waste from landfills across the country each year.

Wood pellets are a renewable resource that has lower carbon emissions than regular wood and does not have to be imported from the Middle East. Increasing the number of pellet stoves in locations where it makes sense would help reduce the amount of fossil fuel being burned.  Heating with wood pellets also provides an emergency heat source when their is a power outage.

Wood pellets are more convenient to use than chopping your own wood and provide a more efficient source of heat.  Granted, in an area where wood is easily accessible and free, burning wood will likely be the more economical choice.  But if your choice is between paying for chopped wood or paying for pellets, buying a pellet stove would likely be the way to go.

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Convenient Pellet Delivery


As heating fuel prices have soared, more and more people have been taking a look at wood pellet stoves to reduce their utility costs.

Pellets that fuel these stoves are made from wood scraps ground into pellets to form a smooth burning fuel. They are a cheaper way to heat, but they are a bit less convenient than just turning up the thermostat.

The wood pellets typically come in 40-50 pound bags. And every day, sometimes twice a day depending on usage, you have to reload the stove.

But according to Peter Howe of NECN, Jon Strimling had a better idea: Flick a switch to have a hopper load the stove. Then get a guy with a truck to load the hopper for you.

“We’re taking pellets in bulk out of the back of this truck, by bulk I mean there’s no bags in them, and we’re flowing them down this pipe into the garage” says Strimling.

Two fills like this a year should be enough to heat a home.  That’s three to four tons of product that the homeowner doesn’t have to move.

Strimling’s company now charges about three hundred and twenty five dollars a ton, delivered, for pellets on pallets. In heating value, 30 to 40 percent less expensive than heating oil. They’ve just started selling hopper systems they hope will make pellets even more popular.

Not only is bulk delivery of the pellets less hassle than pellets in a bag, it costs about 10 percent less too.  There’s actually ten to fifteen percent of the product cost tied up the packaging.

Despite the hands-on requirements of wood pellet heating, it’s popularity has grown quickly in recent years. Over 800,000 homes in the U.S. use pellets for some or all of their heat, burning 2.2 billion pounds annualy. The industry has grown to 80 pellet makers and 23 manufacturers of fireplace inserts, stoves, and furnaces.

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Silver Lining to Pine Beetle Devastation

Colorado’s problem with Pine Beetles devastation of lodge pole pines finds a silver lining in wood pellet production.  Pellet mills are making pellets from the lodge pole pines killed by the pine beetle infestation.

This creates two benefits for the area.  By cleaning up the dead trees and turning them into wood pellets, mills are able to bring very low-cost fuel to homeowners, and reduce the risk of deadly forest fires throughout the region at the same time. This is a win-win situation.

Local companies and groups are also creating initiatives to plant indigenous trees in non-harvest locations throughout Colorado as a method of replenishing forests devastated by the mountain pine beetle.  It is estimated that all of Colorado’s mature lodgepole forests will be
destroyed by the beetles within five years.

At $299/ton the cost of these wood pellets is still equivalent to fuel oil at below $2.50/gallon. A far cry from what consumers are seeing in their heating oil bills.

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Silver Lining to Pine Beetle Devastation

Colorado’s problem with Pine Beetles devastation of lodge pole pines finds a silver lining in wood pellet production.  Pellet mills are making pellets from the lodge pole pines killed by the pine beetle infestation.

This creates two benefits for the area.  By cleaning up the dead trees and turning them into wood pellets, mills are able to bring very low-cost fuel to homeowners, and reduce the risk of deadly forest fires throughout the region at the same time. This is a win-win situation.

Local companies and groups are also creating initiatives to plant indigenous trees in non-harvest locations throughout Colorado as a method of replenishing forests devastated by the mountain pine beetle.  It is estimated that all of Colorado’s mature lodgepole forests will be
destroyed by the beetles within five years.

At $299/ton the cost of these wood pellets is still equivalent to fuel oil at below $2.50/gallon. A far cry from what consumers are seeing in their heating oil bills.

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