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ebinmaine

BBT's next restoration project

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ebinmaine

The whole top polished up. 

 

 

IMG_20201123_201410.jpg

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formariz

Absolutely beautiful stove. Something definitely to be proud of.

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ebinmaine
27 minutes ago, formariz said:

Absolutely beautiful stove. Something definitely to be proud of.

Much appreciated. 

Wait'll she's done....

 

 

I'm very much looking forward to seeing this sitting in it's place in the great room. 

 

 

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WHNJ701
On 11/10/2020 at 9:09 PM, jabelman said:

I will get some pics, I pulled an old 1800s stove out of clean up.  It was made in reading pa.  The old man restored it.  It's a non use piece/decoration lots of cool casting parts

Here's a few pics, unfortunately it's non functional now, but at least it didn't go to the crusher.  

PXL_20201122_185132423.jpg

PXL_20201122_185146269.jpg

PXL_20201122_185152613.jpg

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ebinmaine

@jabelman 

Showed this to Trina this morning.  She says that's a beautiful stove and a good save.

Just curious to know why it isn't usable as a stove?

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WHNJ701
11 hours ago, ebinmaine said:

@jabelman 

Showed this to Trina this morning.  She says that's a beautiful stove and a good save.

Just curious to know why it isn't usable as a stove?

Unfortunately it has some broken pieces in the cast iron.  Not sure the heat rating of jb weld!

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ebinmaine
7 minutes ago, jabelman said:

heat rating of jb weld

Not a test I'd want to do I guess:lol:

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ebinmaine

 

 

 

IMG_20201124_204619550.jpg.35442d2fc28789589acc3da19b4c0110.jpg

 

IMG_20201124_204634359.jpg.b348056a58148e58a478489015c6b701.jpg

 

 

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Pullstart

Looks like an old pair of boots getting ready for a wedding!  Polish polish polish!  Great work, Trina!

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Pullstart

Lookin’ great!  How long is the polish supposed to last, with average use?

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ebinmaine
Just now, pullstart said:

Lookin’ great!  How long is the polish supposed to last, with average use?

Thanks man!

 

You know to be honest I hadn't even really thought about the lifespan of the polish...

 

I would say it's going to be quite a while in our case because the environment it's in is dry and we are really good about not putting fires together that are either too cold or hot.

 

I wouldn't be surprised if it was a minimum of 10 years or even much much more...

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ebinmaine

This old beautiful piece has been completely polished and rubbed down. 

Came out excellent. 

 

Our friend is making a baseplate for the inside and Trina is going to pick up some more decorative floor blocks then we'll be ready for installation. 

 

 

 

 

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formariz

Great job. What a beautiful stove. Even the back is as detailed as the front and sides. Something that both manufacturer and owner can be proud of. A timeless piece that can be appreciated for as long as it exists.

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ebinmaine
16 minutes ago, formariz said:

Great job. What a beautiful stove. Even the back is as detailed as the front and sides. Something that both manufacturer and owner can be proud of. A timeless piece that can be appreciated for as long as it exists.

Thanks Caz. 

We're really looking forward to getting it put in place. 

It's going to change the entire character of the space it's in for us. 

 

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ebinmaine

Trina and I brought the stove outside this afternoon and she put a curing fire 🔥 to it. 

 

Here's a few pics and ...... TA-DAHH!!

Trina's first video she's made with her speaking...

 

 

 

IMG_20210101_192431.jpg.5947ba0bc0f6d7eb69a1c8fba8e81fad.jpg

IMG_20210101_192436.jpg.e83fc379245f85476ff0bb5cb4bcce11.jpg

 

IMG_20210101_192441.jpg.99d9121c109a03df0bc6753edbe9f5a8.jpg

 

 

And a bonus pic of the beast we heat the house with...

IMG_20210101_172414457.jpg.ec03e2b27a4c7aa85c449df95733c2ef.jpg

 

 

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Stormin
6 hours ago, ebinmaine said:

 

And a bonus pic of the beast we heat the house with...

IMG_20210101_172414457.jpg.ec03e2b27a4c7aa85c449df95733c2ef.jpg

 

 

 

How does that heat your house, Eric? Do you have some way of circulating the warm air?

 

Our stove in the living room heats the water and feeds the radiators

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ebinmaine
4 hours ago, Stormin said:

How does that heat your house, Eric? Do you have some way of circulating the warm air?

Yessir. 

 

There are cast iron grates we cut into the floor. 6 in total. 2 are cold air returns in the far corners of the house from the stove. 4 are 12" x 14" in the area above the stove. 2 great room, 1 bathroom, and 1 in the bedroom we don't actually use because we don't heat there. We put it there in case future owners would want it or for super cold snaps.

Turns out we haven't uncovered it in (3 or 4?) seasons since putting them in. 

 

We also have a fan setting between 2 floor joists that blows up into the great room through the grate closest to the stove. Another of the multitudes of Trina's neat ideas. Works excellent. 

 

 

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Stormin

In hindsight, I should have done similar when I renovated my place when I bought it. Installed a fan above the stove and ducting to blow warm air into the other rooms. To late now.

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ebinmaine
2 minutes ago, Stormin said:

In hindsight, I should have done similar when I renovated my place when I bought it. Installed a fan above the stove and ducting to blow warm air into the other rooms. To late now.

I originally got the grating idea from a fella back about 8 or 10 years ago.

He was heating 3 stories with the same basement located source. 

He'd done some research and asked his own local official for help and came up with places in his house that were a good path for airflow and convenience of the residents. He did his best to keep the hot grates out of travel paths and was able to hide the cold air returns under beds or in closets. 

 

 

I really hadn't been using the stove much at that point. When we began heating more and more with wood it obviously made more sense. 

 

We put a bit of thought into the locations here as well. The 2 in the Great room are between doorways and the one in the bathroom is positioned such to be easily stepped over. 

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ebinmaine

Well everyone...

We FINALLY got around to installing the stove in the upstairs great room today.  

 

Not quite 3 years. 

:laughing-rolling:

 

Don't wanna rush in to anything ya know.   

 

 

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Rob J.
2 hours ago, ebinmaine said:

Well everyone...

We FINALLY got around to installing the stove in the upstairs great room today.  

 

Not quite 3 years. 

:laughing-rolling:

 

Don't wanna rush in to anything ya know.   

 

 

Awesome shape! 

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rjg854
2 hours ago, ebinmaine said:

Don't wanna rush in to anything ya know.   

Yeah we know :teasing-neener: :laughing-rolling:

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ebinmaine
13 hours ago, rjg854 said:

Yeah we know :teasing-neener: :laughing-rolling:

More of the story...

She had it fully refinished within a very short time back when we got it. 

We inspected it, did some research, and spoke with our local Fire Chief. 

It was "highly recommended" that she had a separate fire box built for it. 

 

Trina asked a friend who happily made one up of extremely heavy duty materials. 

It was about 3 hairs too wide. 

We had the option to partially disassemble the stove to fit it in but decided that wasn't the best idea. 

So the friend took it back to redo. 

Folks got busy. Life happened. Etc.  

A few weeks ago the insert  got back here. 

We were waiting then for a day that wasn't ridiculously roasting 🥵🥵🥵 outside because we knew it would need to be cooked slowly and off gassed. 

Yesterday was the perfect day. 

Cool weather with a hurricane pulling away so the wind was able to ventilate the house.  

 

 

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Mickwhitt

BBT has done a grand job on that stove.

As we would say over here it looks a Reight Bobby Dazzler. 

We have an inset Woodburner and cook jacket potatoes inside the fire box. They are the best jackets, skins as hard as a cricket ball. 

 

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