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Fireplaces and Stoves

3fingers

One Too Many
Messages
1,797
Location
Illinois
Well, here's this weekend's Nashville flea market find:

Tennessee Stove Works, Chattanooga No. 413... 33" H X 13" W. I like it because it's small. The metals in good shape and it still has the mica ports. Seller said it was from a caboose - could be, but I'm having a hard time finding vintage coal/wood stove documents on-line for the company. I'm soaking the screws with penetrating oil so I have a small chance of getting them out without drilling. Then its off to be blasted to clean it up.

All great fun!

View attachment 116632
Nice. Have you ever had anything soda blasted? I have not but I've seen the results. Much preferable than sand on metal. Strips the nasty without pitting the material.
 

Bugguy

Practically Family
Messages
556
Location
Nashville, TN
Nice. Have you ever had anything soda blasted? I have not but I've seen the results. Much preferable than sand on metal. Strips the nasty without pitting the material.

Actually, yes. You're right that its less cutting. I think that's what most the shops that do small custom work use,
 

Zachary

One of the Regulars
Messages
167
Location
Vienna, Austria
A beautiful glimpse of our fire place, which will soon get back to action, as the hot season dawns ... (note the beautiful rest of the living room with vintage wallpapers and similar.)

E7A95541-C4AA-404B-BC6B-2FE4117B3D0D.jpeg
 

vitanola

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,254
Location
Gopher Prairie, MI
Here is the fireplace in our reception parlor. This unit replaced the original simple marble mantle when the house was re-decorated in the '80s. Last year I replaced the coal grate with an 1890's vintage gas fire, one of the units with the asbestos flock on the back. It supplements the heat innthe parlor nucely, and we have neither soot nor ash to clean.

Webp.net-resizeimage.jpg

The room was papered this spring with a 1920s vintage damask paper. I have to find a seamstress to make up draperies, for just now morning can bring on snow blindness
 

Woodtroll

One Too Many
Messages
1,211
Location
Mtns. of SW Virginia


Our sole source of heat for our ~110 year-old farmhouse for the first 30 years or so my wife and I lived here. About 5 years ago we chickened out and installed a single gas vent-free heater to carry us over a night or two in the winter if we needed to be away from home.

I helped build three of these when I was about 12 years old. My dad and grand-dad, who actually built the stoves, each got one, and the guy who owned the welding shop we "borrowed" to cut and weld the metal got one as his payment. When my grand-dad sold his last country house and lost his woodlot, he gave his stove to me. The stove is 5/8" plate steel lined with fire brick and with cast iron doors, will take a 28" log pretty easily, and when loaded and banked properly will hold fire for 36 hours or so if we are gone from home. It takes four good men to lift and move it. Luckily we haven't left this house since we married! My father still uses his daily in the colder weather as well.

We burn about 8 cords of hardwood in an average winter, counting some wood for the stove in the workshop, which we just keep heated enough to keep the pipes from freezing.

As I get older the idea of cutting all that wood is less attractive, but there is NOTHING like being able to back up to a wood stove on a wet or snowy winter day and let the heat drive the chill from your bones!
 

Bugguy

Practically Family
Messages
556
Location
Nashville, TN
Well, here's this weekend's Nashville flea market find:

Tennessee Stove Works, Chattanooga No. 413... 33" H X 13" W. I like it because it's small. The metals in good shape and it still has the mica ports. Seller said it was from a caboose - could be, but I'm having a hard time finding vintage coal/wood stove documents on-line for the company. I'm soaking the screws with penetrating oil so I have a small chance of getting them out without drilling. Then its off to be blasted to clean it up.

All great fun!

View attachment 116632

Well, its only taken almost forever to get the stove blasted. High temperature primer, a finish coat, new mica and its ready to go. No powder coat - I was tired of waiting on the trades. I'm really pleased with it. Haven't figured out where to place it, but its a keeper.

IMG_1971 2.jpg
IMG_1972 2.jpg
 

Warden

One Too Many
Messages
1,336
Location
UK
Popped in a 'new' fireplace in my sons bedroom.

Just for decoration as the chimney has been removed from the roof line, but nice to see it back in place.

To see it click here for my Instagram pics of the fireplace.
 

Bushman

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,138
Location
Joliet
We have 2 lovely old ash trees that will be coming down before long. The emerald ash borer has gotten them both.
Such a shame. :(

Here's something I slapped together real quick yesterday. Patio fireplace made from an old grill and an old desk piece. Pounded a couple nails into the one corner to hold up wood, and voila! I might make some adjustments, like placing steel strips around the lip of the bowl as right now the edges kept catching fire from the heat. The idea is solid, though!
Mw1K9fA.png
 

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