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June 2022

What a transformation 😍 A full installation of a Portway Arundel 5kw stove by Portway Stoves installed by our registered HETAS engineer with a flexible flue liner, slate hearth & finished with an oak beam in #baddelygreen #stokeontrent 🔥

What a transformation 😍 A full installation of a Portway Arundel 5kw stove by Portway Stoves installed by our registered HETAS engineer with a flexible flue liner, slate hearth & finished with an oak beam in #baddelygreen #stokeontrent 🔥 Latest update from Stove Specialists Ltd via Stove Specialists Ltd – stove installation Stove Specialists Ltd […]

What a transformation 😍 A full installation of a Portway Arundel 5kw stove by Portway Stoves installed by our registered HETAS engineer with a flexible flue liner, slate hearth & finished with an oak beam in #baddelygreen #stokeontrent 🔥 Read More »

Clean it Give your stove a good clean before you give it a rest for the summer. Ashes can be corrosive if they’re allowed to sit, so you will want to ensure that you’ve got rid of them all before your stove is out of use for any extended period. Get your chimney swept No doubt your woodburner and flue system have taken a lot of punishment over the winter months. Remove corrosive soot and creosote from the system and ensure that your stove is ready for action as soon as the temperatures drop by calling upon the services of a chimney sweep. Check for rust If there are any signs of rust on your stove, it’s not going to get any better with time so it is best to stop the problem at this stage. A bit of wire wool and some stove paint will have your appliance looking as good as new. Check your parts You’ll also need to give your stove a once-over MOT to check for any other problems. Things to look for include gaps between the panels, a warped or damaged grate, holes in your baffle, cracked glass and damaged rope. Follow this guide to performing a check-up on your wood-burning stove. Leave the door ajar During the summer months it is best to leave the stove door slightly ajar. This ensures air flow and ventilation to the stove system, which helps to prevent corrosion. Follow those tips and your wood-burning stove should be in prime condition when you next need it.

Clean it Give your stove a good clean before you give it a rest for the summer. Ashes can be corrosive if they’re allowed to sit, so you will want to ensure that you’ve got rid of them all before your stove is out of use for any extended period. Get your chimney swept No

Clean it Give your stove a good clean before you give it a rest for the summer. Ashes can be corrosive if they’re allowed to sit, so you will want to ensure that you’ve got rid of them all before your stove is out of use for any extended period. Get your chimney swept No doubt your woodburner and flue system have taken a lot of punishment over the winter months. Remove corrosive soot and creosote from the system and ensure that your stove is ready for action as soon as the temperatures drop by calling upon the services of a chimney sweep. Check for rust If there are any signs of rust on your stove, it’s not going to get any better with time so it is best to stop the problem at this stage. A bit of wire wool and some stove paint will have your appliance looking as good as new. Check your parts You’ll also need to give your stove a once-over MOT to check for any other problems. Things to look for include gaps between the panels, a warped or damaged grate, holes in your baffle, cracked glass and damaged rope. Follow this guide to performing a check-up on your wood-burning stove. Leave the door ajar During the summer months it is best to leave the stove door slightly ajar. This ensures air flow and ventilation to the stove system, which helps to prevent corrosion. Follow those tips and your wood-burning stove should be in prime condition when you next need it. Read More »

Have you heard the term Ecodesign stoves being bandied around? The wood-burning stove business has no shortage of jargon, and this is one of the latest technical terms to enter our vocabulary. While the Ecodesign principle is useful for customers (and certainly will be in the next few years), for somebody who is new to woodburners and trying to work out which appliance is right for them, it is another word with which to get to grips before you can make an informed purchase. In this article, we will aim to demystify Ecodesign stoves and answer some key questions about them. What is Ecodesign? Ecodesign isn’t restricted to wood-burning stoves. It is a Europe-wide programme to lower emissions based on a directive of the European Parliament that comes into full effect in the UK in 2022. As well as woodburners, it also relates to a range of other products, such as: Domestic and service industry lighting products: Directional and non-directional lamps (including ultraviolet radiation) Fluorescent lamps (without integrated ballast) High-intensity discharge lamps Ballasts and luminaires able to operate such lamps Electrical devices: Computers and servers Game consoles Simple/complex set-top boxes Standby for networked equipment Televisions Household appliances: Cookers Dishwashers Freezers Refrigerators Tumble dryers Washing machines Vacuum cleaners Heating and cooling devices: Air conditioners Heaters Comfort fans Heaters Industrial fans Local space heaters Solid fuel local space heaters Solid fuel boilers Ventilation units Water heaters Other products: Circulators Electric motors Electric power consumption standby and off mode External power supplies Imagining equipment Power transformers Professional refrigeration Water pumps How does Ecodesign affect woodburners? The Ecodesign regulations require significant reductions to emissions from woodburners. In fact, emissions need to be 55% lower than the current requirements for DEFRA exempt stoves (which can be used within smoke control areas). Burning wood produces particulate matter (PM). The amount produced can vary significantly depending on what is being burned and how the stove is being operated. In other words, using well seasoned wood with a moisture content of less than 20% and operating your woodburner efficiently significantly reduces the particulate emissions. What are Ecodesign stoves? The Stove Industry Alliance has preempted the introduction of the Ecodesign directive by working with Hetas to setup independent testing to verify woodburners that meet the lower emissions and minimum efficiency criteria for Ecodesign. It is branding stoves that pass the tests as Ecodesign Ready. Independent research conducted by Kiwa Gastec shows Ecodesign stoves can reduce emissions by 90% in comparison to an open fire and by 80% compared to an old stove. Should Ecodesign impact my buying decision? At the moment, buying an Ecodesign stove is a personal preference based on it having been verified as having lower emissions (in the same way that you might buy a new car based on similar reasons). When the Ecodesign directive came into force in January 2022, it only relates to the sale of new appliances, and any stoves sold prior to the start of the initiative will still be unaffected by the changes 🔥

Have you heard the term Ecodesign stoves being bandied around? The wood-burning stove business has no shortage of jargon, and this is one of the latest technical terms to enter our vocabulary. While the Ecodesign principle is useful for customers (and certainly will be in the next few years), for somebody who is new to

Have you heard the term Ecodesign stoves being bandied around? The wood-burning stove business has no shortage of jargon, and this is one of the latest technical terms to enter our vocabulary. While the Ecodesign principle is useful for customers (and certainly will be in the next few years), for somebody who is new to woodburners and trying to work out which appliance is right for them, it is another word with which to get to grips before you can make an informed purchase. In this article, we will aim to demystify Ecodesign stoves and answer some key questions about them. What is Ecodesign? Ecodesign isn’t restricted to wood-burning stoves. It is a Europe-wide programme to lower emissions based on a directive of the European Parliament that comes into full effect in the UK in 2022. As well as woodburners, it also relates to a range of other products, such as: Domestic and service industry lighting products: Directional and non-directional lamps (including ultraviolet radiation) Fluorescent lamps (without integrated ballast) High-intensity discharge lamps Ballasts and luminaires able to operate such lamps Electrical devices: Computers and servers Game consoles Simple/complex set-top boxes Standby for networked equipment Televisions Household appliances: Cookers Dishwashers Freezers Refrigerators Tumble dryers Washing machines Vacuum cleaners Heating and cooling devices: Air conditioners Heaters Comfort fans Heaters Industrial fans Local space heaters Solid fuel local space heaters Solid fuel boilers Ventilation units Water heaters Other products: Circulators Electric motors Electric power consumption standby and off mode External power supplies Imagining equipment Power transformers Professional refrigeration Water pumps How does Ecodesign affect woodburners? The Ecodesign regulations require significant reductions to emissions from woodburners. In fact, emissions need to be 55% lower than the current requirements for DEFRA exempt stoves (which can be used within smoke control areas). Burning wood produces particulate matter (PM). The amount produced can vary significantly depending on what is being burned and how the stove is being operated. In other words, using well seasoned wood with a moisture content of less than 20% and operating your woodburner efficiently significantly reduces the particulate emissions. What are Ecodesign stoves? The Stove Industry Alliance has preempted the introduction of the Ecodesign directive by working with Hetas to setup independent testing to verify woodburners that meet the lower emissions and minimum efficiency criteria for Ecodesign. It is branding stoves that pass the tests as Ecodesign Ready. Independent research conducted by Kiwa Gastec shows Ecodesign stoves can reduce emissions by 90% in comparison to an open fire and by 80% compared to an old stove. Should Ecodesign impact my buying decision? At the moment, buying an Ecodesign stove is a personal preference based on it having been verified as having lower emissions (in the same way that you might buy a new car based on similar reasons). When the Ecodesign directive came into force in January 2022, it only relates to the sale of new appliances, and any stoves sold prior to the start of the initiative will still be unaffected by the changes 🔥 Read More »

A lovely installation of a Portway Arundel by Portway Stoves fitted by our HETAS engineer with a flexible flue line, slate hearth & finished with an oak beam…..look at the before & after pictures below in #trench #telford #shropshire 🔥

A lovely installation of a Portway Arundel by Portway Stoves fitted by our HETAS engineer with a flexible flue line, slate hearth & finished with an oak beam…..look at the before & after pictures below in #trench #telford #shropshire 🔥 Latest update from Stove Specialists Ltd via Stove Specialists Ltd – stove installation Stove Specialists

A lovely installation of a Portway Arundel by Portway Stoves fitted by our HETAS engineer with a flexible flue line, slate hearth & finished with an oak beam…..look at the before & after pictures below in #trench #telford #shropshire 🔥 Read More »

A lovely full installation of the Portway Rochester 5 by Portway Stoves fitted by our HETAS engineer, with slate hearth (cut to size on site) & flexible flue liner, in #tipton #westmidlands 🔥

A lovely full installation of the Portway Rochester 5 by Portway Stoves fitted by our HETAS engineer, with slate hearth (cut to size on site) & flexible flue liner, in #tipton #westmidlands 🔥 Latest update from Stove Specialists Ltd via Stove Specialists Ltd – stove installation Stove Specialists Ltd Unit 1C, Chetwynd Lodge Chester Road

A lovely full installation of the Portway Rochester 5 by Portway Stoves fitted by our HETAS engineer, with slate hearth (cut to size on site) & flexible flue liner, in #tipton #westmidlands 🔥 Read More »

🔥Test It Tuesday 🔥 Carbon monoxide is a poisonous, odourless, tasteless, invisible gas. In the home it is formed from incomplete combustion from any flame-producing appliance. … Current legislation states that if you have installed a wood burning or multifuel stove a carbon monoxide alarm is required. In order to ensure that your home has maximum protection, it’s important to have a CO detector on every floor. Five feet from the ground. Carbon monoxide detectors can get the best reading of your home’s air when they are placed five feet from the ground. Near every sleeping area. We have alarm/detectors in stock Every stove ordered today will receive a free alarm when quoting “Test It Tuesday” For more information 💻 info@stovespecialists.co.uk 📞 08008321850 Message us on our Facebook page 🔥

🔥Test It Tuesday 🔥 Carbon monoxide is a poisonous, odourless, tasteless, invisible gas. In the home it is formed from incomplete combustion from any flame-producing appliance. … Current legislation states that if you have installed a wood burning or multifuel stove a carbon monoxide alarm is required. In order to ensure that your home has

🔥Test It Tuesday 🔥 Carbon monoxide is a poisonous, odourless, tasteless, invisible gas. In the home it is formed from incomplete combustion from any flame-producing appliance. … Current legislation states that if you have installed a wood burning or multifuel stove a carbon monoxide alarm is required. In order to ensure that your home has maximum protection, it’s important to have a CO detector on every floor. Five feet from the ground. Carbon monoxide detectors can get the best reading of your home’s air when they are placed five feet from the ground. Near every sleeping area. We have alarm/detectors in stock Every stove ordered today will receive a free alarm when quoting “Test It Tuesday” For more information 💻 info@stovespecialists.co.uk 📞 08008321850 Message us on our Facebook page 🔥 Read More »

A lovely installation of an Ecosy Ottawa installed by our HETAS engineer in #aldridge #walsall #westmidlands 🔥

A lovely installation of an Ecosy Ottawa installed by our HETAS engineer in #aldridge #walsall #westmidlands 🔥 Latest update from Stove Specialists Ltd via Stove Specialists Ltd – stove installation Stove Specialists Ltd Unit 1C, Chetwynd Lodge Chester Road Newport, Telford TF10 8AB +44-1902-519089

A lovely installation of an Ecosy Ottawa installed by our HETAS engineer in #aldridge #walsall #westmidlands 🔥 Read More »

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