Fireplace inserts do more than breathe new life into an old, wood-burning fireplace. Fireplace inserts also provide cleaner air in your home and create a more efficient heating system, helping reduce energy bills in the face of today�s skyrocketing gas prices.
An electric fireplace with heater can be just as romantic as a real wood burning
fireplace if you give it a chance. Set the room up for a romantic night, plug in or turn on your electric fireplace and add a bit of music to the room. Turn the lights down low and bring in the dining room table and a setting for two. Toss out a blanket on the floor with pillows in front of the
fireplace and enjoy the night.Keep in mind even though this is an electric fireplace with heater you should still be careful around it. Make sure you never have water lying around it and don't allow your children to play with it. Find out if your electric
fireplace with heater turns itself off or if you need this option. You don't want to find out the hard way. Adding an electric fireplace with heater to your home doesn't mean large electric bills. It means adding warmth, fun, and beauty. Who knows, you may like them so much that you come back for a couple more if you really like them.It�s not all gas and wood when it comes to fueling your new
fireplace insert. Fuel pellets made from compressed sawdust are available for wood-burning fireplace inserts. You can buy heating pellets in bulk, making it easier to budget for your heating costs in advance. Pellet fuel also emits the lowest amount of smoke emissions, according to the HPBA, and is available from specialty and home improvement retailers. If compressed sawdust isn�t for you, coal is another option for fueling your new
fireplace insert. Also according to the HPBA, anthracite coal is the most commonly used in supplemental heating, and is a low-cost, readily available fuel for wood-burning fireplaces.A brick or stone enclosure forms the basis of the
fireplace. Variously known as the fireplace opening or recess or builders opening, it may be set flush with the wall or built out into the room, forming a chimney breast. This chimney breast rises through the height of the house, emerging through the roof to form a chimney stack. At the top of the opening the gather and flue combine to carry the smoke up the chimney. If the chimney is shared by several
fireplaces on different floors, it may contain more than one flue.Have plenty of time for maintenance? No time at all? Want ambiance, not heat? Ask yourself these and other questions before deciding on which fireplace insert to install. Then talk to the
fireplace insert specialists at Brick-Anew to help determine the fireplace insert that fits your maintenance level, style, heat output needs and fuel availability. Complete your new
fireplace insert with Brick-Anew�s fireplace screens, tools and accessories, and even give your existing masonry a total makeover with Brick-Anew�s patent-pending brick remodeling system. Then lie back in front of your roaring fire and say, �Now that�s a
fireplace.�The masonry over the fireplace opening is supported by a lintel or a brick arch. Old inglenook
fireplaces used massive oak beams, whereas a strong iron strap usually supports an early brick arch. Later fireplaces may have a straight arch supported by angle iron, and by the twentieth century cast concrete lintels were the norm.Still crave the crackle of a real wood fire? Want a
fireplace insert with low-cost fuel? An EPA-certified wood-burning fireplace insert can create a blaze contained within a firebox that uses a glass door rather than a single, permanently sealed glass front. These inserts create a less smoky atmosphere than their traditional wood-burning counterparts while still radiating plenty of heat efficiently. According to the Hearth, Patio and Barbeque Association, wood-burning
fireplace inserts generate nearly 65 percent more heat than traditional fireplaces and cut smoke emissions by nearly 90 percent. An added bonus: wood-burning fires can provide warmth and light when a power or gas line goes down.To complete the assembly, a mantelpiece or mantel � or
fireplace surround, as it is often called today � is fitted to frame the grate or fireplace opening. The mantel may be constructed from stone, slate, marble, wood or cast iron. The walls around it may be finished with wood paneling, or more commonly with plaster, and in some cases the mantel extends upwards to form an impressive chimneypiece. Mirrored overmantels were introduced in the late eighteenth century, and these became the classic feature of Victorian sitting rooms.
Fireplace Insert Fuel Options
Have plenty of time for maintenance? No time at all? Want ambiance, not heat? Ask yourself these and other questions before deciding on which fireplace insert to install. Then talk to the fireplace insert specialists at Brick-Anew to help determine the fireplace insert that fits your maintenance level, style, heat output needs and fuel availability. Complete your new fireplace insert with Brick-Anew�s fireplace screens, tools and accessories, and even give your existing masonry a total makeover with Brick-Anew�s patent-pending brick remodeling system. Then lie back in front of your roaring fire and say, �Now that�s a fireplace.�
Author: Sam Wilhoit