More and more people have log burners nowadays and with winter just around the corner this is a must have, to enable you to spread that warmth around your home.....It can't be beaten at this price.
Starts this Sunday (25th Sept)
With an optimal working temperature of 205°C-345°C (230-650F)
Stove Fan is designed to be used on the top of a freestanding wood stove.
It helps to cut energy costs by dispersing heat around the room, using your stove's own heat as its energy source.
This maximises the efficiency of your stove so the room is warmer and means you use less fuel.
Dimensions: 21 x 24 x12cm
Material: Aluminium
Product Type: Tools & Equipment
Temperature Range: 205 - 345 degrees
Weight: 1kg
Top comments
robertoegg to phatbhoy
23 Sep 1630#40
Luckily my neighbours have no children, and need killing.
schnecker
23 Sep 1621#11
what about an abnormal radiator?
joedastudd to phatbhoy
23 Sep 1611#31
Burning wood is carbon neutral, sustainable and modern setups are very efficient and clean.
That "clean" electricity from the grid mainly comes from non renewable fossil fuels.
I'd be far more worried about diesel vehicles then I would wood burners.
pigeon84
23 Sep 164#34
Really? Depends what you mean by green.
You are correct that total thermal efficiency for fossil generating plant is lower, remembering of course that the end goal is to produce electricity not heat.
However, coal is burned at high combustion temps and the flue gas is treated to remove particulates and sulphur dioxide.
Natural gas burns cleanly anyway, no sulphur or particulates.
Burning wood at low temperatures in an oxygen-poor environment, then releasing the exhaust untreated generates lots of fine particulates.
It is certainly potentially carbon neutral and sustainable, but that doesn't automatically make it good for local air quality.
Elsewhere in the world, wood burning is starting to come under scrutiny - control measures have been taken in Tasmania for example:
"From 2001 to 2004, the number of households that used wood-burning stoves fell from 66 to 30 per cent. Atmospheric pollution from air particulates during winter fell by 40 per cent.
Deaths among men fell by 11.4 per cent, particularly from cardiovascular causes, which saw a decline of 17.9 per cent, and from respiratory causes, which retreated by 22.8 per cent."
All comments (139)
steevieboy4u
23 Sep 162#1
mxer450
23 Sep 161#2
Review:
These are great!!
steevieboy4u to mxer450
23 Sep 163#3
And they never need any batteries :smiley:
steevieboy4u
23 Sep 162#4
They should also come with the Aldi 3 year warranty
ggfergy
23 Sep 161#5
For the price absolute bargain. But they ain't no Caframo...
Daniboy
23 Sep 161#6
Do they make much noise?
sabu57 to Daniboy
23 Sep 161#7
They are virtually silent, but need to be positioned carefully for optimum effect - to the rear and side of the stove top, so check you have enough headroom. This is an excellent price for one of these.
ch1z
23 Sep 162#8
I have one identical to this and they make a big difference our log burner is in an enclosed space and once this starts spinning it helps push the heat out into the room. We have a thermostat in the room and the before and after temps were greatly improved. After 20 mins a very large open plan room was very comfortable. Worth it at this price as when looking they were £50 and upwards. Silent or I can't here any noise and work by the heated air flow....
Opening post
Starts this Sunday (25th Sept)
With an optimal working temperature of 205°C-345°C (230-650F)
Stove Fan is designed to be used on the top of a freestanding wood stove.
It helps to cut energy costs by dispersing heat around the room, using your stove's own heat as its energy source.
This maximises the efficiency of your stove so the room is warmer and means you use less fuel.
Dimensions: 21 x 24 x12cm
Material: Aluminium
Product Type: Tools & Equipment
Temperature Range: 205 - 345 degrees
Weight: 1kg
Top comments
That "clean" electricity from the grid mainly comes from non renewable fossil fuels.
I'd be far more worried about diesel vehicles then I would wood burners.
You are correct that total thermal efficiency for fossil generating plant is lower, remembering of course that the end goal is to produce electricity not heat.
However, coal is burned at high combustion temps and the flue gas is treated to remove particulates and sulphur dioxide.
Natural gas burns cleanly anyway, no sulphur or particulates.
Burning wood at low temperatures in an oxygen-poor environment, then releasing the exhaust untreated generates lots of fine particulates.
It is certainly potentially carbon neutral and sustainable, but that doesn't automatically make it good for local air quality.
Elsewhere in the world, wood burning is starting to come under scrutiny - control measures have been taken in Tasmania for example:
"From 2001 to 2004, the number of households that used wood-burning stoves fell from 66 to 30 per cent. Atmospheric pollution from air particulates during winter fell by 40 per cent.
Deaths among men fell by 11.4 per cent, particularly from cardiovascular causes, which saw a decline of 17.9 per cent, and from respiratory causes, which retreated by 22.8 per cent."
All comments (139)
These are great!!