nehog
Well-known member
...you do not want a wood stove in your garage:
http://www.ledgertranscript.com/home/3510233-95/fire-ipswich-leel-prince
http://www.ledgertranscript.com/home/3510233-95/fire-ipswich-leel-prince
I'm curious why you think the location of the stove had anything to do with it?
Stove in house: people are there, near the stove, able to watch and monitor it and any problems. Stove in garage: no one there, no one sees the start, and once started a lot of very flammable substances are usually there to feed the fire.
I'm not trying to push this on people: I'm merely saying that IMHO an unattended wood stove is a major hazard, and in this case it appears to have cost at least two lives (I'm not sure the grand parents will survive, giving their injuries...)
Stove in house: people are there, near the stove, able to watch and monitor it and any problems. Stove in garage: no one there, no one sees the start, and once started a lot of very flammable substances are usually there to feed the fire.
I'm not trying to push this on people: I'm merely saying that IMHO an unattended wood stove is a major hazard, and in this case it appears to have cost at least two lives (I'm not sure the grand parents will survive, giving their injuries...)
How is a wood stove any different from a furnace? Properly installed and properly maintained, fire stays INSIDE the wood stove and there is no particular danger. Its not an open fireplace...
But everyone should be aware that there is no magic way to make wood heat safe in an unattended environment.
There are several inherent risks, such as run away (the stove gets much hotter than expected because of unburned wood and no one is there to change the air-intake to reduce the fire) and chimney fires (which can happen most any time.)
You say "Properly installed and properly maintained" but truth is it is very difficult to properly maintain a wood stove under the conditions described. They are not a 'set it and forget it' type device.
Additionally, the issue with stuff being (too) close is always a problem, someone moves something and doesn't realize it is not far enough away from the stove (then the stove overheats, and oops, a fire!)
How is a wood stove any different from a furnace?
heat output is controlled by a device called a thermostat. A wood stove doesn't do that.
Phil
You should be able to load up your woodstove (assuming they have a decent stove), leave the air intake wide and not have to worry. If your stove is in decent shape it cannot "run away." Should that happen, your stove is sucking major amounts of outside air, meaning it has major issues.
I used to have a very nice fully insulated 2 car garage overlooking a lake on an acre of wooded property. Full of tools and equipment and cameras. Cranked up the gas heater and went to town for a minute. Burned to the ground. No insurance.![]()
Were they (Fire Marshal) able to determine what happened?

Were they (Fire Marshal) able to determine what happened?