Defo not the weather for it at the moment but lowest ever price on Amazon and great reviews. Get one for the winter.
The heat powered stove fan is designed to circulate the warm air created by a stove. Improved warm air circulation results in greater comfort and less fuel consumption. It is self powered using heat from the stove and does not need batteries or mains power.
Top comments
edgeone to chrisr83
20 Jun 163#8
An efficient stove fan helps circulate the hot air and saves fuel. Having run with and without I wouldn't go back.
All comments (25)
buckiebull
6 Jun 161#1
Good price if it lasts as my mate bought a cheap one of ebay and it melted on the top of his stove lol
A decent one is almost double this price and are very good at circulating heat round your room!
If your stove is a stand alone one it will put out more heat than one that is heating a boiler like my one but still put out a great deal of heat :smile:
backtothecaves
6 Jun 161#2
I never knew these existed. Wish I had a log burner
edgeone to backtothecaves
20 Jun 162#7
By far the best change we've made to the house. Actually look forward to it being cold enough to have it on
emdiesse
7 Jun 16#3
I'm thinking the same @backtothecaves - any good log burner deals!? Maybe I can fit one to my shed for the hell of it!
ilovefullstops
7 Jun 16#4
Hopefully your shed isn't wooden.
edgeone
20 Jun 16#5
Decent price. Found Caframo Airmax to be more effective though
chrisr83
20 Jun 16#6
My parents have a clearview multifuel and it belts out the heat. If you had a decent fire you wouldn't need this
edgeone to chrisr83
20 Jun 163#8
An efficient stove fan helps circulate the hot air and saves fuel. Having run with and without I wouldn't go back.
supermrp
20 Jun 16#9
Buy the Ecofan one, Been on the market for over 60 years. Bearing is made to withstand the extreme heat
sprite127594
20 Jun 16#10
That's brilliant. Do they work on a radiator?
SandiRaRa
20 Jun 161#11
we've had one for a couple of years and they do help get the heat moving round the room, great price
Longy
20 Jun 16#12
£46.50 now.
Cristiano
20 Jun 16#13
Not £34. But seems like a good idea
Sackboy1
20 Jun 161#14
Does it really use less fuel and also put out more warmth? Call me a cynic but how is that possible?
No idea about the fan but having a flue thermometer is good to understand when your running too cool (creosote build up) or too hot. If you've been using a burner for years I doubt you need one though as you soon get to know the characteristics
edgeone
20 Jun 16#17
Very simple --> heat going up your chimney vs being circulated around your room / house..... One makes you feel much warmer
Sackboy1
20 Jun 16#19
Ok, definitely not Einsteins theory of relativity. You want more thermal energy in to the room, you have to burn more mass?
I'm struggling to see how the fan can do anything to stop heat going up the chimney.
Would like to be proven wrong, free energy is always a good thing! :stuck_out_tongue:
meglaman2000
20 Jun 161#20
It's not free energy. If you turned a fan heater on and pointed it out of the door into the kitchen you wouldn't feel very warm. If you pointed it at yourself you would.
Same amount of energy.
stevetheman
21 Jun 16#21
These are good. I made my own though.
pat0000
21 Jun 16#22
Have to say, I disagree with edgeone, sorry mate. I have a multi-fuel burner, when it's lit especially burning wood, the heat can't go up the chimney because the liner is well insulated and there is a register plate at bottom of chimney. The heat is great, we have to open all downstairs doors to let the heat into stair case etc, lots of times I open windows in winter and it's great coming down in the morning to a lovely warm room, plus I'm burning a lot less than when I had an open fire, most of That heat went up the chimney.
Rickardo
21 Jun 16#23
Goodness sake, you really won't be told, will you? It's the distribution of heat that is important as per edgeone's images. The best way of heating a room is via convection as radiation has distance/volume limits, unless the output is so hot you then can't get close at all -even then you get relatively hot compared to the environment (think standing in front of an open oven, or bonfire). Therefore that does require more fuel, so if you can distribute the heat and help the convection currents, you better heat the room without additional fuel.
crazyface
21 Jun 16#24
I'm not convinced these are beneficial, but hey they cost nowt to run. I got mine off e bay £25.
PS EVERYTHING IS ON E-BAY !
pdug175
22 Jun 16#25
I have one and certainly recommend a stove fan. it moves the heat around your room more efficiently. and my stove now never runs too hot
Opening post
The heat powered stove fan is designed to circulate the warm air created by a stove. Improved warm air circulation results in greater comfort and less fuel consumption. It is self powered using heat from the stove and does not need batteries or mains power.
Top comments
All comments (25)
A decent one is almost double this price and are very good at circulating heat round your room!
If your stove is a stand alone one it will put out more heat than one that is heating a boiler like my one but still put out a great deal of heat :smile:
I'm struggling to see how the fan can do anything to stop heat going up the chimney.
Would like to be proven wrong, free energy is always a good thing! :stuck_out_tongue:
Same amount of energy.
PS EVERYTHING IS ON E-BAY !