Log Burner & Stove Installation at Great Prices

Wolverhampton | Birmingham | Telford | Oxford | Farnham | Exeter | Gloucester | Aylesbury | Bristol | Cheltenham | Oxford | Midlands | Somerset | Wiltshire | Surrey | Buckinghamshire | Hampshire | Berkshire | and many other parts of the UK

0800 832 1860

Freephone | Free Quotes

🔥

🔥 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

🔥 Read More »

Installation of customers own stove in an existing fireplace fitted by our HETAS engineer with our flexible flue liner in #suttoncoldfield #westmidlands 🔥

Installation of customers own stove in an existing fireplace fitted by our HETAS engineer with our flexible flue liner in #suttoncoldfield #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

Installation of customers own stove in an existing fireplace fitted by our HETAS engineer with our flexible flue liner in #suttoncoldfield #westmidlands 🔥 Read More »

We’re regularly contacted by people asking about a metal plate at the top of the inside of their wood-burning stove. Sometimes they call it a ‘roof’ or a ‘ceiling’, sometimes they call it a ‘panel’. Often they want to know what it is and what is its purpose. Usually they haven’t even noticed it was there until there was a problem, such as the plate has fallen from its position. No doubt plenty more people are searching Google for information on the metal plate ‘roof’ at the top of their woodburner, so we decided to write this blog post in the hope that we might be able to offer them some assistance. The plate is actually called a baffle plate. Once you know that, you will be able to find out a lot more information about the mystery panel. As the descriptive queries we receive suggest, the baffle plate sits at the top of the inside of a woodburner, just below the top of the firebox. Its purpose is to stop gases escaping straight up the flue pipe. The baffle serves as a barrier to the most direct route for gases to leave the firebox. By delaying the gases’ exit, the baffle allows more of the flammable gases to be burnt rather than leaving the stove unspent. The benefits of this of two-fold. Firstly, it means you get more bang for your buck from your fuel. By ensuring as much as possible of the fuel’s flammable gases are burnt, you’re getting the maximum heat generation from each load of fuel. Secondly, it is better for the environment for the flammable gases to be burnt inside the stove rather than disappearing up the chimney and into the air unspent. A baffle plate makes for a greener burn.

We’re regularly contacted by people asking about a metal plate at the top of the inside of their wood-burning stove. Sometimes they call it a ‘roof’ or a ‘ceiling’, sometimes they call it a ‘panel’. Often they want to know what it is and what is its purpose. Usually they haven’t even noticed it was

We’re regularly contacted by people asking about a metal plate at the top of the inside of their wood-burning stove. Sometimes they call it a ‘roof’ or a ‘ceiling’, sometimes they call it a ‘panel’. Often they want to know what it is and what is its purpose. Usually they haven’t even noticed it was there until there was a problem, such as the plate has fallen from its position. No doubt plenty more people are searching Google for information on the metal plate ‘roof’ at the top of their woodburner, so we decided to write this blog post in the hope that we might be able to offer them some assistance. The plate is actually called a baffle plate. Once you know that, you will be able to find out a lot more information about the mystery panel. As the descriptive queries we receive suggest, the baffle plate sits at the top of the inside of a woodburner, just below the top of the firebox. Its purpose is to stop gases escaping straight up the flue pipe. The baffle serves as a barrier to the most direct route for gases to leave the firebox. By delaying the gases’ exit, the baffle allows more of the flammable gases to be burnt rather than leaving the stove unspent. The benefits of this of two-fold. Firstly, it means you get more bang for your buck from your fuel. By ensuring as much as possible of the fuel’s flammable gases are burnt, you’re getting the maximum heat generation from each load of fuel. Secondly, it is better for the environment for the flammable gases to be burnt inside the stove rather than disappearing up the chimney and into the air unspent. A baffle plate makes for a greener burn. 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 »

🔥

🔥 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

🔥 Read More »

Call for your free, no obligation quote, for installation in 2022 & get your heating bills down, whilst making your home look stunning 🔥

Call for your free, no obligation quote, for installation in 2022 & get your heating bills down, whilst making your home look stunning 🔥 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

Call for your free, no obligation quote, for installation in 2022 & get your heating bills down, whilst making your home look stunning 🔥 Read More »

A lovely installation of a Portway Arundel by Portway Stoves installed by our HETAS registered engineer in #wellington #telford #shropshire 🔥

A lovely installation of a Portway Arundel by Portway Stoves installed by our HETAS registered engineer in #wellington #telford #shropshire 🔥 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 a Portway Arundel by Portway Stoves installed by our HETAS registered engineer in #wellington #telford #shropshire 🔥 Read More »

stove specialists ltd hetas engineer

REVIEWS

Check out some of our reviews below…