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Posted

Elmira airtight wood burning cookstoves were very good, but I understand they sold that part of the company to Heartland. The new company continues to make excellent wood burners.

Ya'll still burning wood in the kitchen up there?

Marc

Posted

Elmira airtight wood burning cookstoves were very good, but I understand they sold that part of the company to Heartland. The new company continues to make excellent wood burners.

Ya'll still burning wood in the kitchen up there?

Marc

It's a new age thing, Marc. Food tastes better cooked on a wood fire, or something like that.

I see 2 or 3 wood burners in the kitchen in a given year. The airtights have an extra deep firebox.

Not something I personally miss from my childhood.

Wood warms you 5 times, the first 4 when you cut it, haul it, split it and stack it. [:)]

From grade school -

"Johnny, can you name 3 parts of a woodstove?"

"Lifter, leg and poker?"

"Report to my office after school" [:)]

Posted

I have a 1940 vintage Roper. No safety devices, utterly reliable. $250 for the stove, $300 to rebuild the oven t-stat a couple years after I bought it.

Put up a pic, please. Some of those old Roper's are awesome.

Posted

For almost 20 years our daily driver was a 1920's Odin gas range. We still have it in our barn and I'm positive that it would go back to work tomorrow without complaint. It has a really small four-burner cook top that just isn't practical.

When we remodeled our kitchen my choice was 30's O'Keefe & Merrit, 20's and 30's Chambers and some older Ropers and Norge models. My wife prevailed though and we have a 36 inch Blue Star.

I love our big range and it has a couple 32k btu burners that boil 2 qts of water in about two minutes, a simmer burner that will coddle water at 210 degrees and a giant oven. Still.... if we did again again, I'd work harder for the vintage range.

Posted

Blue Star is the new classic imho. I fiddled with some old Chambers for a while, retro'd a Roper, toyed with a couple other behemoths, etc., but if one likes to cook, some of the new models rule.

Dacor makes a 30" that's solid, no bells or whistles, just pure function, a high btu output burner and a convection oven.

There's nostalgia and then there's cooking. It's a choice.

Posted

Chris, I guess you've moved out of the Bergen Co. and joined US Inspect ? I did a stint with them around 15 years ago. Most of the guys are gone now except for Mike C and Guiseppe. Best of Luck.

Posted

This one is very similar to mine, though a bit newer. Mine has a separate valve for the oven fuel. Turn to on, turn the stat to just above room temperature, hold match to ignitor tube.

I have those salt and peppers but have swapped them for a set with a timer.

Mine also has a work light over the vent.

Click to Enlarge
tn_2016210215411_vintage-stove-austin-tx.jpg

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