Back when I started the other thread (Hot Water Heat) I was looking for an alternate way to heat my new home that I was planning.
Part of my research was in outdoor wood powered boilers. In my research I found that they burn 10-15 cord per year, almost regardless to how much you are heating with them. For a somewhat energy efficient home, that is quite wasteful. If you were heating a barn, shop, garage and a house, all off one boiler, then maybe, it might be worth looking into.
I found that the outdoor boilers were all just too big for a moderate (2500 square) home. They spend a lot of their time just burning to keep going and not heating anything. Either going cold or "on the fan" going full blast to catch up again. All the while going through copious amounts of wood.
Overall I was not impressed with what was available at the time (2005-2006).
I settled on a "three way hybrid" system. I have an LP fired, forced air furnace, an LP fired boiler (for the in floor heat in my basement and garage) and a wood fireplace in the great-room which can heat the entire house.
This winter I have burned 500 gallons of LP and about 4 cord of wood (since September).
My neighbor has recently built a home with a similar system, but his combines the water heater and boiler into one unit. It is an on-demand type of water heater with a heat exchanger for his in-floor needs. I think it is a little more efficient than my direct vent water heater and separate small boiler.
Part of my research was in outdoor wood powered boilers. In my research I found that they burn 10-15 cord per year, almost regardless to how much you are heating with them. For a somewhat energy efficient home, that is quite wasteful. If you were heating a barn, shop, garage and a house, all off one boiler, then maybe, it might be worth looking into.
I found that the outdoor boilers were all just too big for a moderate (2500 square) home. They spend a lot of their time just burning to keep going and not heating anything. Either going cold or "on the fan" going full blast to catch up again. All the while going through copious amounts of wood.
Overall I was not impressed with what was available at the time (2005-2006).
I settled on a "three way hybrid" system. I have an LP fired, forced air furnace, an LP fired boiler (for the in floor heat in my basement and garage) and a wood fireplace in the great-room which can heat the entire house.
This winter I have burned 500 gallons of LP and about 4 cord of wood (since September).
My neighbor has recently built a home with a similar system, but his combines the water heater and boiler into one unit. It is an on-demand type of water heater with a heat exchanger for his in-floor needs. I think it is a little more efficient than my direct vent water heater and separate small boiler.