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Wood Stove Heating For Sailboats

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Within the first 5 minutes of this video, there are several ideas that might be helpful to heat a sailboat for cool or cold weather. The rest of the video tells how to install a wood stove, similar, possibly, to what the good Captain Slocum might have used. At the end of the video, Rebecca explains why the decision to go wood. It was a tough call as there was no perfect solution. The choice of heaters could be influenced by the area one is sailing in.  

capta

I wonder how well saltwater saturated wood burns? Where exactly would one store a half cord or so of wood on a modern sailboat? Of course, if she was a dock queen, then no problem, but in that case wouldn't electric heat be a bit easier and cheaper?  

pdqaltair

capta said: I wonder how well saltwater saturated wood burns? ... Click to expand...

Yep, Capta, it could mean an every other day beach stroll. Maybe we will load on a ton of coal for ballast. It is surprising though, how many sailboats have put this same stove on their sailboat and traveled the same region. No dock queen here. There are no docks where we are going which is part of the attraction. You should hear the great stories about the Falklands. Hundreds of islands and hardly any cruising sailboats. I ran into Skip Novak the other day at our local Haut Bay, grocery store, he runs charters in the Patagonia area. More amazing stories and certainly a charter boat I would not mind getting on while ours sits safely at anchor. We will see how it all works out for us.  

MikeOReilly

I've looked long and hard at this exact stove. I'm almost convinced to give it a try. My problem is, I'm not sure I need a better heat source (I use an alcohol burner right now). My issues with a stove like this is the wood storage, dirt inside, and the soot. I know these are excellent stoves which burn very efficiently once up to temperature, but I also know that as the stove heats up, and cools down, it will produce smoke, soot and likely some ash. I'm concerned about the impact of this on the cabin and deck and perhaps sails. I see the video folks are also concerned about the smoke on deck issue. I'm not sure I like their solution. As far wood storage goes, it's going to be an issue, but I suspect this will be easier to manage. These stoves take so little fuel that you really don't need to have much on board. And I would stock up with a good supply of compressed natural fibre bricks (no glues). Something like this: https://canawick.com/bricks/  

MikeOReilly said: My issues with a stove like this is the wood storage, dirt inside, and the soot. I know these are excellent stoves which burn very efficiently once up to temperature, but I also know that as the stove heats up, and cools down, it will produce smoke, soot and likely some ash. I'm concerned about the impact of this on the cabin and deck and perhaps sails." Mike, I have had the same concerns. But it is surprising how many other people use this same stove on their boat when sailing in very cold climates and no one has mentioned a problem of spilling ashes in the main saloon. Nor has anyone complained about soot on their Bimini or main, like I have imagined. I probably should have used the term "solid fuel stove" rather than just "wood" as these stoves are built solidly enough to also burn coal. We will get a fire going with wood then throw in some coal. We have gotten a lot of responses from people who have sailed the Tierra Del Fuego area with this stove and it worked well for them. The British marine author, Tom Cunliffe, says he has had a solid fuel stove on each of his yachts. On one Atlantic crossing, Tom says, a fire continually burned in the stove or the cold weather would have unbearable. He generally uses wood to start the fire then adds coal. Click to expand...

outbound

Sailed Maine and New England for years. Have had solid fuel, drip diesel, forced hot air and forced hot water. Conclusions If you sail any system that won’t tolerate boat movement is worthless. If you button up in sleet and cold rain any system that has combustion in living areas is dangerous. If your system doesn’t automatically turn off if combustion is interrupted or incomplete is dangerous. If your system doesn’t provide even heat throughout the vessel and is dependent upon radiant heat to heat living space it will be ineffective and uncomfortable. Any system that requires frequent attention while in use won’t work in practice. Therefore believe hydronic heat such as a wesbasto is the only viable choice for a liveaboard cruiser.  

Arcb

I really like wood heating on a boat. Had a buddy who lived aboard year round in Ontario that had a home made version of a Cubic mini on a Hans Christian 36. He used one of those heat activated fans to circulate the air. It was hot! Often had to open the hatches to cool the boat down even in the mid of winter. I have always wanted a solid fuel heater, but for the sailing I do on the great lakes April- December, my alcohol space heater is generally pretty adequate.  

Lazerbrains

I would never want that on a boat. Diesel or kerosene is much better for fuel storage, soot, ash, and is much easier to extinguish. It is hard to control the temperature of a wood stove, hard to put out (dangerous) and they are sooty no matter what people say. And as pointed out above, they require constant attention. No thank you.  

If I was convinced I really needed a permanent installed heater on our boat, I would probably go with one of these Cubic stoves. The downsides have already been mentioned. The main upsides to me are: cheap and easy access to fuel, simple installation, relatively inexpensive to buy, and a certain warmth that can only come from burning wood. I had a friend who used a home built wood stove on his boat sailing Lake Superior. It was wonderful. And I heated with wood for over a decade while living at our last land home: a cabin on the north shore of Lake Superior. So I understand the pros and cons of this choice. The issue for me is, I haven't needed more than my alcohol heater so far. And this is despite the fact that we mostly cruise in areas that most people would call "chilly": Lake Superior, and now Newfoundland. I guess I (we) just have a higher tolerance for cold.  

What alcohol heater? Like origo?  

Yes, but that's not really relevant to the thread. Although, if you want to discuss these heaters I'm happy to do so. Just not here.  

Thanks. That's all I wanted to ask.  

35 yrs of wood stove (main galley a diesel Dickinson) I welded up the box 1/4 plate steel. Door was gold plated glass front (scrounged). Similar size to the one in the video.The stove pipe was doubled , outer (shield)open at stove and deckhead No fan needed. Sometimes a quick run below to open frwd hatch and close the main hatch before the smoke started, after a tack, Here on the coast there's no shortage of beach wood. (fir bark burns like coal.) The salted wood needs a fire brick liner or the steel eats out. A SS plate diverter protects the top. Wood heat's the best comfort thing (almost) ever.IMHP. If anyone is making one, Ive got several glass doors (the hardest part to make) and lots of helpful hints like feet, fiddles, bilge fan .  

TomMaine

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That's a nice stove Tom. Did you make it?  

For a really simple stove-top heater, that is vented and does NOT put the exhaust in the cabin, read pages 48-51 of this month's Good Old Boat Magazine . I've been using this for 2 seasons on my F-24, and it will easily warm a small cabin from frost to shirt sleeves. It will work on any stove type. https://goodoldboat.com/MagazineDistribution/GOB131-SFRZE20d.pdf Good Old Boat is offering this month's issue free for all you shut-ins. That said, I installed a propane system on my cruising cat. Good heat is vital to enjoy winter sailing. I have a wood stove in my home, I enjoy using it some, but would find it far to annoying to depend on.  

Tom Cunliffe likes the solid fuel heaters. He has a YouTube video with his opinion.  

I did a lot of research on installing a solid fuel heater (Tiny Tot coal heater) on my Fantasia 35 about 7 or 8 years. As part of my research I had discussions with my insurance company and they told me then it would have zero impact on my insurance provided I follow the manufacturers installation instructions (they wanted pics). Odd, because a woodstove in my house costs about $400/year in additional insurance. But, currently have electric central heat in house, so no combustion or CO risk. I think a natural gas furnace also increases my insurance.  

K & M puts heating stoves in many of their boats. Have also seen the stove used to heat a closed loop forced hot water heating system done in a fashion as to be able to tolerate as much as twenty degrees of tilt. However this is in diesel not wood. That’s the issue with heating a sail boat. Having a system that’s safe underway. It’s delightful to have heat. On occasion will sit on first step or stand on second step of companionway. Put slider up to my chest. Be under the hard dodger so even freezing rain isn’t an issue. Boat has multiple registers and several zones but it’s still wasteful to do this but oh so nice. A heating stove heats mostly by radiant heat. There’s some circulation even without a fan but the heat is uneven. Had a tayana with a drip diesel stove. Worked fine at anchor to heat the salon. But rest of the boat was cold. If you were on the boat for days it all did get hot. If you were just daysailing or doing weekends you could expect hours before the berths were warm. Also the ports wept as your exhalations raised the humidity in the boat. So before expending the bucks and losing the space involved think it through. How much cold weather sailing do you do? Is your boat insulated? Is it cored? Can you put in enough BTUs to allow ventilation and keep humidity reasonable. Will the weight screw up trim? How long can you run the heat before using up fuel? Heat wonderful but to do it right is fairly involved.  

Kindling was always a chore (it rains a lot here), I now use those waxy fire place logs.....Cut most of the way thru with a table saw (no band saw) 3/4 " slices Break a slab off, break it half, light with butane torch. pile on the medium sized chunks of??  

I don't know what psychological factor is at play, but I love sitting in front of a fire. I can almost watch it, with a good scotch in my hand, like it was TV on a cold winter night. I would love to have one on the boat, but it would have to have been pre-engineered. Most I've seen take up too much room. Sorry to say that's most evident on the OP's installation. I also could never imagine using one underway, or even at a rolly anchorage. Just too easy to trip into. This reminds me of a sportsmans/conservationist club outside NYC, near where I grew up. My father's name is on a plaque there for having won an event, when I was a kid. One of the clubs ritual games is a timed event to boil a pot of water, starting with only a log, an axe, a knife, matches and pot of water. No kindling and, if you use more than one match, you get a time penalty. I don't think this vid was taken there, but it shows how it's done. Some members had tweaks in technique. From a single log, with no kindling to a boiling pot of water in 5 mins. Club record was 2 or 3 mins, irrc.  

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Navigator Wood Stoves Provide Classic Heating and Cooking Onboard

Custom-made, cast-iron stoves are functional works of art..

wood stove for sailboat

Tucked into a wooded hillside in the San Juan Islands of Washington state, Navigator Stove Works is a young family operation attached to a long history of vintage stoves. Formally of Brooklyn, N.Y., and now based on Orcas Island, Navigator produces three compact wood-burning, cast-iron stove models for use on land and at sea. Originally designed for use aboard boats, the scaled-down stoves are also popular for cabins, RVs, and other small structures on terra firma.

Two of the Navigator stove patterns-the Sardine and the Little Cod-originally were made in the Lunenburg Foundry in Nova Scotia, Canada. The company, founded in 1891, manufactured a wide range of marine equipment for commercial vessels and yachts. Lunenburg ceased producing stoves in the early 1990s with the closure of its iron foundry operations. Navigator produces the Sardine and Little Cod using Lunenburgs foundry patterns.

The third model, the Halibut, is designed by Navigator and is based on old East Coast favorite, the Shipmate No. 212. Navigator also has a fourth stove in the works: a biodiesel prototype, the Herring. The Navigator stoves are custom made by order only, and the company is currently producing about 75 a year.

Navigator Wood Stoves

Safety First

As with any stove or heat source aboard, users must follow manufacturers installation instructions explicitly and heed their warnings to ensure safe operation. Installed in accordance with the manual, all Navigator stoves meet American Boat and Yacht Council liquid and solid fuel boat heating systems standards. These and other applicable U.S. and Canadian fire standards are also outlined in the manual, which all prospective buyers should study closely. For safety reasons, the stoves should not be used on a gasoline-powered boat.

The iron stoves are cast in the northeastern United States and then shipped in sections to Andrew Moore at Navigator Stoves on Orcas Islands. The stoves are sold as plain iron with a traditional stove polish, but a customer can opt to add one of six porcelain enamels -grey, black, mint, deep mariner blue, dark green, or classic barn red.

Moore prepares, polishes, and smooths the iron on each stove at his workshop, and then tweaks and assembles those ordered as polished iron. Stoves that are ordered with the porcelain coating are sent to the Midwest for coating, then flat-packed back to Moore for polishing, tweaking, and assembly. Lead times vary from one week to eight weeks, depending on availability.

All three stoves are designed to burn natural wood and charcoal. The two smallest models are best for heating 300 square feet or less. The largest model, the Halibut, is able to burn coal. The stoves are not intended for use with any other fuel sources. For use in warmer months, Navigator has designed alcohol drop-in burners. The drop-in burner literally drops into the stove top and burns denatured alcohol. The burner element is self-pressurizing and is located in the cast-bronze burner housing to minimize fuel spills. One 2-ounce filling will burn for 20 minutes. Running in simmer mode, the burn time is doubled. Tests show it takes 8 minutes to boil a liter of water. The alcohol can be refilled for longer cook times.

Navigator Wood Stoves

Navigator Stoves also sells many of the accessories associated with installing and maintaining a wood burning stove, including stove pipes, deck heads, and heat shielding. Heat shielding can be a critical issue, and Navigator offers custom-made shielding panels made from either 20-gauge stainless steel or 16-ounce copper.

The smallest and most popular model, the Sardine is a mere 12 by 12 by 11 inches, and weighs 35 pounds. The heat output is 7,500 to 18,000 BTUs.

Navigator Stoves suggests using this rule of thumb for determining required BTU: 15 x volume of space to heat = required BTUs. If extreme cold temperatures are expected, one might want to use a factor of 20. This compact Sardine is best suited for small boats or sleeping cabins aboard larger vessels. It is two-thirds the size of the Little Cod and costs $699 for plain iron and $1,199 for the porcelain enamel option.

First produced circa 1917, this solid-fuel stove was initially designed to keep fishermen warm and well fed as they jigged for cod. Simple and reliable, it is economical to run and maintain. It is intended for use in the galley, cabin, or pilothouse, or small spaces on land. By adding one or two of the alcohol drop-ins, it can essentially replace any alcohol stove onboard. The Little Cod measures approximately 13 by 18 by 14 inches and weighs 55 pounds. It produces 10,000 to 28,000 BTUs. It has a stainless-steel sea rail to keep cook pots in place, and has holes in the legs for securing stove to a platform. It is priced at $1,125 for iron and $1,675 with porcelain or $1,875 for red porcelain.

The Halibut has cast-bronze sea rails and corner posts. It has a glass firebox door, stainless-steel ash pan and oven rack, an oven thermometer, and a Halibut relief on the door. The Halibut doesn’t come up to temperatures as fast as the little stoves, but it does offer the oven for onboard cooking of bread, potatoes, and pies. It can also burn coal, whereas the smaller stoves are designed for wood and charcoal only. The platform size for the Halibut is 26 inches wide minimum, and 18 inches deep. The oven is 9 by 9 by 8 inches, and the stove weighs 175 pounds. The approximate heat output is 25,000 to 35,000 BTUs. The stove costs $2,850 with porcelain.

Navigator Wood Stoves

Herring Prototype

Navigator Stoves is also currently working on a diesel/ biodiesel prototype stove. It is intended to be 28 inches tall with a 12-by-12-inch footprint, and weigh 55 pounds. The Herring will have a glass-plate front and a herring relief on the front plate. It is designed with a “blue flame” natural draft burner from Europe and no fan or electricity is required. Tests by Navigator have shown a very clean, steady burn. The expected BTU rating is 16,000. Navigator is also working on a design for a water heating loop.

The Navigator stoves are functional art, a nostalgic throwback to simpler times. If convenience is your top priority, then don’t bother. Like any wood-burning stove, these come with soot, ash, and smoke, all of which can find its way onto the deck and cabintop. The cast iron construction is rugged, but it is also heavier than other heating options. Wood stoves take longer to heat up then a gas oven, and they require supervision and maintenance. But, notes Moore, that is the point, really.

A woodburning stove involves the sort of philosophical shift that a wooden boat requires: Convenience and ease of maintenance are not the aims. If you subscribe to the idea of a lifestyle of the present, in which you tend your fire, not just switch it on, then these well built, finely finished stoves fit the bill.

The stoves can be installed by an experienced and involved do-it-yourselfer in a couple of weekends, with the lions share of the time dedicated to thinking and planning, rather than installing.

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Have a Tiny-Tot wood and coal burner on my Mason. Custom tools for tending. Makes it easy to keep clean. Fire it up early. Easier to maintain the daytime heat than to start from scratch. Reload later in the eve, good all night. Wake up to a warm boat.

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Specifications: - 12 x 12 x 11 Inches, (30x30x28 Cm). Weighs 35 Lbs, (16 Kg). Features:

- 86 % Efficient ! - Cast iron construction - For Solid Fuel

(cut your wood rounds to 6" long and then split down to approx. 3".)

- Frontside Glass Window Option

- Uses 4" Chimney Pipe (10 Cm). - 7,500 - 18,000 BTU [ 2 - 5 Kw.] Heat Output. Rule of Thumb: 15 x Volume of Space to Heat = Reqd. BTU's. Modern "Clean-Burn" Technology - Non Catalytic . 3.5 G/Hr.

Please note: As of May 2020 this model's new status is EPA Exempt as a "camp stove". - Cook Surface Dimensions: 11" wide x 8" deep. - Plain Iron w/traditional stove polish or Optional High Temp Paint. -Porcelain Enamel Upgrade (green porcelain stove pictured above). - Right Hand Side Door Standard. Left Hand May Be Requested.

- Brass rail Option.

- Ultra-compact - The "Laptop" of cookstoves.

- Great For Smaller Boats or Sleeping Cabins Aboard Larger Vessels. - 2/3'rds the size of the "Little Cod", similarly constructed. - Compatible with our bronze "Drop-In" Burner Modules!

A stout little stove! '22 Pricing: $1670 for Plain Iron CALL for various build options w/Paint, Porcelain, Glass, Brass Rail.

[email protected] / 360 298 4623

I am pleased with the way my Sardine Wood Stove heats my trailer on cold nights.

By using hardwood I can keep a nice bed of coals burning for about four hours.

The stove top works great for making oatmeal in the morning and the alcohol burning insert works well when it is too warm for a wood fire.

I have been traveling for about six months through all kinds of weather and my stove makes my little trailer feel like home.

We are really enjoying our SARDINE stove... it is a pleasure to go down to the boat and fire it up with such little effort,

and be rewarded with a toasty cabin in no time flat. So much better than our old diesel stove. Finally we can get out an enjoy some

winter weekend getaways around the Gulf Islands on the boat. Cheers from the warm Winter sailors.

R.L. / CANADA

We ordered a stove from Navigator Stoveworks last yeast, we wanted to send you a quick word to say how much we love our little

Sardine stove. It has carried us through winter (we live aboard the boat). We're so glad we chose this model. It is built like a tank,

and looks damn gorgeous. We have a dry toilet aboard, and in colder weather when the stove sees more use we re-use the wood ashes

as cover. In that way, the wood has yet another use aboard.

R. & D. / CANADA

Out here on the 'Wet' Coast, specifically in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, keeping the cabin of your boat warm and toasty makes for a better boating experience. A wood stove is a great solution, but marine wood stoves are costly. The smallest ones available are still too large for the sixteen-foot sailing barge I intend to build (my own design) shown below.

So as a warm up to building the boat itself, I decided to make the wood stove first. A pretty extensive search online yielded few results or examples of anyone making their own small solid fuel heater for a boat, so I decided that I would document the construction of mine for the sake of interest.

However, this is not a building plan or instructions to construct this stove. I assume no liability whatsoever for anyone copying this design, or even being remotely inspired to do something similar.

Having said that, here's how I went about making this stove: The main body of the stove is a piece of mild steel box section, 3/8 inch thickness and six inches by six inches by seven inches long. I was able to find it at a local machine shop in their scrap bin. The ends were already square and just need a little dressing with a file.

I chained drilled (more on that later) a round hole to accept a muffler fitting and finished the hole well enough to basically tap the fitting in tightly from the inside, and secured it with nail after drilling a hole to accept it. I made three feet with carriage bolts and black iron plumbing fittings. The stove will be bolted down so I figured three feet were enough, and with the single foot at the front, it will be easier to sweep and clean under the stove.

Next I made the back of the stove with a six inch by six inch piece of ¼ inch mild steel plate, and drilled and tapped to accept 10-32 machine screws to bolt it on. Before doing so, I smeared on copious amounts of stove cement to seal it.

I dressed everything up with a file after assembly.

The front was made much the same way, but I used countersunk 6-32 screws, and prior to installation I cut out the opening for the door.

The above photo shows how I cut the holes by chain drilling. The secret is to drill each hole slightly overlapping the last. If you drill too closely however, the drill point slides off into the previous hole. When this happened I flipped the piece over and came in from the other side. I used the lowest speed on the drill press and kept the belt loose enough that I could stop the chuck with my hand. This allowed me to drill without clamping thereby speeding up the process. If the bit grabbed, the drill would stall rather than spinning the piece like a whirling scimitar. There is no guarantee the belt on any drill press will slip when you want it to. So if you are going to do what I did at least wear heavy gloves and in any and every case, safety glasses. Like my Dad used to say, "do what I say, not what I do" so folks I'm making no recommendation here. My advice is, always clamp your work and keep your hands clear.

Once the piece was cut out, I put it in the vice and filed the edges to my scribed lines with a bastard.

Here you can see the draft control I made. The knob on the left is made of a piece of brass drilled and tapped to accept a 6-32 screw which is installed in a countersunk hole from the back of the piece so it can slide across the front easily. The right knob is drilled and tapped for a 10-32 screw that protrudes from the inside of the stove though a tapped hole. To adjust the draft I loosen the right knob and move the control to the desired position, and then tighten.

The most time consuming of the whole project was making the door. I wanted a window so I could see the cheery flame and avoid suicidal thoughts when it is raining. I was able to source a piece of stove glass quite cheaply from the local glass supplier - enough to make a few spares. The glass is very expensive otherwise - about $90 a square foot, but they had a scrap piece they couldn't use and let me have it for $10.

I made a frame from mild steel the same thickness as the glass, and sandwiched it between an inside frame, and the door itself (see test result at the end of the article). The door is larger than the stove opening by ½ inch all around. The glass frame, and rear frame are the same size as the stove opening. The openings in the door and the rear frame are slightly smaller (about 1/8 inch all around) than the glass itself. The rear frame is drilled and tapped to accept 6-32 screws, and the door and glass frame were drilled larger so the screw threads cleared. Before assembly I smeared it all up with stove cement.

If you are wondering what those three things are on the door they are clamps called clecoes. They are really handy for this sort of work.

Nothing dresses up a stove like this more than some brass trim. I found this brass fork at the local Salvation Army thrift store for two bucks. I sawed the end off and mounted like a grill over the window - kind of a Poseidon's trident. I figured it would make it a little more nautical.

The hinge is a plain old door hinge, cut and shaped. I shimmed it so that it would make the door fit nicely with the gasket thickness taken into account.

I used an anchor nut locked even tighter with a castle nut as a latch. A decorative brass handle made from another thrift store find is on the other end of the bolt. The gasket is glued on with a special wood stove gasket glue that is clear and looks like model cement. I painted the stove with flat black Tremclad high temperature paint.

The stove would not operate correctly the first time because I ran it without a chimney. Also, the heat from that first trial cracked the glass. When I dis-assembled the door I realized that the tight frame around the glass, along with it all being cemented together caused stresses resulting in the fracture.

I cut a new glass, but installed it without the middle frame, instead using gasket material around the glass. I did not use cement either. Before firing the stove I used a propane torch to heat the whole thing up and see if it would crack again and it did not.

I put on a piece of muffler pipe as a chimney and built a fire with some dry wood. Once the fire was going I threw in a dozen charcoal briquettes and closed the door. I left the draft control full open. The stove threw heat for a good six hours before I went to bed. I don't know how long it burned after that, but I'm very happy with the result. We should be very comfortable in our little boat.

Alan Jones swarfmakeratshawdotca

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Cubic Mini Wood Stoves

CB-1008 CUB Cubic Mini Wood Stove

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  • Easy to install and easy to operate!
  • Eco-friendly
  • Produces very little smoke due to its secondary combustion system!
  • Much safer than a diesel or propane cook stove!
  • Removes humidity from the cabin.
  • The rail is easily removable.
  • Measures only 11" (Wide) x 12" (High) x 10.5" (Depth) ( 27.94 cm x 30.48 cm x 26.67 cm ).
  • If you remove the rail, you have a cooking area of 5" ( 12.7 cm ) from the flue to the edge of the plate and 11" ( 27.94 cm ) side to side.
  • Well seasoned hardwood and pressed logs are the best fuels to burn.
  • Ideally the wood should be cut to 5 3/4" ( 14.60 cm ) long.  It could be cut slightly longer. However 5 3/4" ( 14.60 cm ) allows for good airflow around the sides and it does not damage the insulation on the inside.
  • 6000 BTU - 14, 000 BTU
  • 1.75 - 4.1 KWh
  • Requires a horizontal clearance of 20" ( 50.8 cm ) in all directions without shielding and a vertical clearance of 30" ( 76.2 cm ).
  • Clearances reduced to 3" ( 7.62 cm ) when using proper mounting and shielding.
  • The stove needs a complete flue system comprising of 3"(7.62 cm) flue pipe, 5"(12.7 cm) insulated pipe and exit kit NOT INCLUDED
  • 3/16" laser cut steel top plate.
  • 1/8" laser cut steel body.
  • 1/2" thick vermiculate firebrick insulation.
  • 3/16" thick self cleaning robax glass.
  • Brass plated coil handles.

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  • Technical Data
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FAILURE TO READ AND FOLLOW WARNINGS MAY RESULT IN SEVERE INJURY, FIRE AND/OR POSSIBLY DEATH.

  • Never use liquid fuel or any other material containing fuel to start the fire Only use well seasoned hardwoods or pressed logs without wax or glue as a binder. Appropriate pressed logs should have a wood stove symbol on the packaging. Never use liquid fuels, pellets, or green wood.
  • Never operate your stove without carbon monoxide and smoke detectors
  • Never open a window, hatch or door downwind of the stove
  • Never use liquid fuel or any other material containing fuel to start the fire
  • Do not operate your stove when the stove door is open
  • Never leave your stove unattended when in use.
  • Inspect and clean your flue pipe regularly. (weekly, until you determine your own cleaning schedule.)
  • Keep fuel lamps, fuel containers, aerosol cans and any other combustibles at least 6 feet away from the stove
  • Never use oil when cooking on the top of the stove
  • Do not touch the surface of the stove when in use
  • Never leave children and pets unattended when stove is in use
  • Never use your stove in very rough seas
  • Do not dry wet clothes directly on the stove
  • Your appliance requires periodic maintenance and cleaning. Failure to maintain your appliance may lead to smoke spillage in your boat, cabin, or RV
  • Never clean stove when your stove is hot
  • Children and adults should be alerted to the hazards of high surface temperature and should stay away to avoid burns or clothing ignition
  • Due to high temperatures, the appliance should be located out of traffic and away from furniture and draperies
  • Even after the appliance is out, the stove and the glass will remain hot for an extended period of time
  • Under no circumstances should this appliance be modified
  • Do not operate the appliance with the glass door removed, cracked or broken
  • Do not strike or slam shut the appliance glass door
  • Always allow a small amount of air to enter cabin, open a window, hatch or vent up wind from the stove to replace air consumed by the stove
  • Nontoxic smoke will be emitted during the first hour of operation as the paint is curing. Open windows or hatches as required to vent cabin. Or you can cure the paint outdoors by attaching a couple sections of stove pipe to the stove and lighting it outside. To eliminate the odor can take up to 20 – 30 hours of burn time.
  • Never operate the stove without the baffles being installed correctly.                  

wood stove for sailboat

Inspection and Maintenance

1. Remove ashes from previous use

2. Inspect the flu pipe and clean if necessary

3. Inspect the window and verify that it is free from cracks and breaks

4. Inspect the door gasket and verify that it is properly secured and free of damage

5. Clean the window

6. Close the secondary air intake by pushing the control handle to its furthest rear position

7. Open the primary air intake to its maximum setting by sliding the control handle to its furthest right position

8. Place small timber, paper or cardboard and a log inside the stove and light the fire using a long neck lighter or matches

9. After a few minutes begin to open the secondary control

10. When the stove has reaches its optimum temperature, add larger pieces of wood and adjust the primary and secondary controls to the desired heat output

11. To extinguish the fire, simply close both the primary and secondary air intakes

Tips and tricks

1. To clean the window, use commercially available stove window cleaner or simply dip a damp cloth in the ashes and rub on window. A scraper can also be used but this will reduce the lifespan of the window.

2. To keep the window clean during use, pull the embers towards the front of the stove and place the new burning material towards the rear of the combustion chamber

3. To prevent excessive amber accumulation, allow embers to burn and reduce before adding more wood

4. When starting the fire with pressed logs, cut small 1 inch slices until optimum temperature is reached

5. Pressed logs expand as they burn. Avoid positioning them in a way that can put pressure on the window as they expand

6. The gasket surrounding the door will become very brittle over time. Avoid touching it when operating or cleaning your wood stove

7. In certain high wind conditions, a growling sound may be heard. This is normal and does not represent any danger. Adjust the primary air intake to reduce or eliminate the sound

Returns are only accepted within 30 days of receiving your order. Returned items must be unused, in its original packaging, and protective film must not be removed from the stainless steel products. If a used item is returned, a stove for example: A 160.00$ refurbishing fee must be deducted from the refund along with a 60.00$ restocking fee. 

How many BTU’s does the Cub produce?

6000 to 14000BTU’s.

How big is the Cub?

Width: 11” Height: 12” Depth: 10.5”

How much square footage will the Cub heat?

100 -200 square feet.

How much does the Cub weigh?

27 LBS or 12.25 KG.

What size logs fit into the Cub?

5 ¾” long logs, and it can take up to three or four 2”x4” pieces.

What size is the glass?

6 1/4" x 4 3/4" x 3/16" thick.

What size is the flue collar?

Outside diameter: 3”

Inside diameter: 2 7/8”

Thickness: 1/16”

What are the stoves made of?

They are constructed from laser cut steel plate 1/8” to 3/16” thick! Vermiculate insulation, 3/16” thick self-cleaning Robax glass and quality hardware.

Are the stoves certified?

They are not. Please do your due diligence before placing an order. (Check your local law and regulations.

Is there a warranty on the stove?

Overall wear and tear are not covered. For example: scratches, rusting, baffles, insulation, glass etc.

ALL DAMAGE REQUIRES A PHOTO SENT TO [email protected] .

We offer a warranty on the glass for the first 90 days of use.

If the stove body gets structurally damaged (excludes glass, wear and tear, insulation, intake mesh etc) and you would like to repair it, we will do so free of charge. However shipping will not be covered.

We will gladly help you out.

Can you remove the rail on top of the stoves?

You can, simply align the tabs under the top plate with the holes in the top plate with pliers and it will slide out with ease.

What kind of wood is best to use?

The best wood to burn is well seasoned hard woods. This will help you achieve the best heat output along with the longest clean burn. You can also use pressed wood logs. We do not recommend pellets.

What are the two screws inside the firebox for?

They hold the baffles in place by putting pressure on the top plate. The baffles allow the secondary combustion system to work efficiently.

How does the secondary combustion system work?

Simply put, it pulls air from underneath the stove and introduced in the fire box at the top. The hot air mixes with the smoke and ignites the gases which are created by the burning wood. This produces heat with energy, which would otherwise have been lost up in the flue pipe providing better efficiency.

How much clearance is needed between the stove and combustibles?

Clearances required are 20” in all directions lateral to the stove unless installed with one of our wall mounts. If no shielding is present then you need to provide 20” clearance to combustibles. A 30” Clearances applies to the top of the stove to the surface above. Under the stove should also be shielded and an air gap should be provided.

How long does it take to cure the paint and how do I do it?

Once this process is done the stove will not need to be cured again. The curing of the paint will require you to burn the stove at high heat for several hours. It can take 1-3 hours for the paint to stop smoking. It can then take 20-30 hours for the smell to stop being produced.

This can be done outdoors to prevent the space from being filled with smoke. You can bring the stove outdoors and attach 2-3 sections of pipe. Run it hot and this will evacuate the moisture out the paint. If no pipe is used, the stove will not get hot enough to adequately evacuate the moisture.

Where do the stoves draw their air from?

The air must be replaced since the stove is constantly consuming oxygen. The stove will draw air from the room. In most cases you can open a window or a hatch and that should be enough to replace the air. For spaces that do not have a window, or if you do not want to have a window open, you can use our wall mount with fresh air intake. This will bring air from outside to the area where the stove draws its air from.

Can I use it to cook?

Definitely. We have made many meals on our stoves. The Grizzly has a mini roaster which makes easy to cook virtually anything you want! We would suggest not to cook with oil or grease because it could be fire hazard.

How do I light the stove?

1. Set your intakes: Open the primary air intake found on the front (open when pushed to the right). Keep the secondary air intake closed (found under the stove, closed when pushed

2. Take some paper and place some in the firebox, take some kindling and place it on top of the paper.

3. Light the paper and keep the door open for about five minutes.

4. Once it gets going you can introduce your wood, close the door and let it go for another 20 minutes.

5. After the 20 minutes has elapsed you can then begin to open the secondary air intake activating the secondary combustion system and dampen down the primary as desired.

For more details see here.

How do I extinguish the stove?

You will close both air intakes on the stove by pushing the primary intake all the way to the left, and the secondary combustion slider all the way to the back.

The fire will begin to die out right away, it will take some time for all embers to be fully extinguished. Do NOT leave a lit stove unattended.

How do I maintain a clear window?

The glass that the stove comes with is a self-cleaning glass made for wood stoves. Once the stove reaches temperature, the glass will begin to clear. To maintain a cleaner window, you can pull the coals forward, and then place the new wood towards the back. The quality of the wood will also have an impact and the cooler the stove is run, the darker the glass will be.

How do I clean a dirty window?

When the glass is cold you can mix a bit of ash with some water and rub it in circular motions.

How often do I need to replace the insulation?

The life span of the insulation will vary. It will last longer if the wood is not cut too large which will prevent chipping it. Also placing the wood as opposed to throwing the wood inside will also keep the insulation from deteriorating quickly. Replacement kits are available on our site for each stove.

24 LBS or 11 KG

How many BTU’s does the Grizzly produce?

8000 to 18000 BTU’s.

How big is the Cubic Grizzly?

Width: 13” Height: 15” Depth: 12”

How much square footage does the Grizzly heat?

200 -400 square feet. 

PLEASE NOTE : The square footage mentioned are for spaces with low ceilings.  Example; if you have a space that is 180 square feet with high ceilings it’s best to go with the Grizzly to compensate for the extra space needed to be heated.

How heavy is the Grizzly?

39 LBS or 17.7 KG

What size logs fit into the Grizzly?

6 ¾” long logs and it can take up to four or five 2”x4” pieces

Open the primary air intake found on the front (open when pushed to the right). Keep the secondary air intake closed (found under the stove, closed when pushed forward).

Take some paper and place some in the firebox, take some kindling and place it on top of the paper. Light the paper and keep the door open for about five minutes.

Once it gets going you can introduce your hard wood, close the door and let it go for another 20 minutes. After the 20 minutes has elapsed you can then begin to open the secondary air intake activating the secondary combustion system. You can also dampen down the primary as desired.

How to shut the stove off?

Push the primary intake all the way to the left, and the secondary combustion slider all the way to the back.

You will need to close both air intakes on the stove and the fire will begin to die out right away, it will take some time for all embers to be fully extinguished.

How to keep a clean glass?

The stove glass is a self-cleaning glass made for wood stoves. Once the stove reaches temperature, the glass begin to clear. To maintain a cleaner window, you can pull the coals forward, and then place the new wood towards the back.

How much flue pipe do I need?

The top of the flue pipe must surpass your roof line by one foot to ensure proper draft and safety.

We recommend a minimum of 40” of straight pipe. 

What is the diameter of the flue pipe?

Our stoves take a 3" double wall flue pipe.

How do I connect the flue pipes together?

You will begin by taking the pipe having the flow arrow facing up. Take the second section of pipe and have the inner wall that is crimped and have the edge hit the inside edge of the pipe below. 

Do this at an angle with the seams aligned.

As you push down and twist, bring the pipe up to vertical. You can then push down as far as it will go.

Place a block of wood on the floor and a block on top of the flue, and tap with a hammer until the pipe above comes onto the bump on the pipe bellow.

Do this for all sections until your flue pipe is complete then the entire length can be installed onto the stove.

Fix the pipes together with a screw at each seam

wood stove for sailboat

How do I clean the pipe?

You can see how to clean the pipe  here  

Can I exit out of a wall?

We do not suggest to do so. This is for several reasons:

You will have two elbows creating turbulence slowing the draft.

The slower draft will create more creosote buildup.

You will have more of your flue pipe outside which will cool the pipe quicker and this will also

Reduce the draft, and create more creosote.

For these reasons we do not have elbows for our pipe, nor do we know any that will work with our pipe.

A straight run up and out the roof is the best practice for a properly functioning stove.

How do I exit the pipe? 

You can see all the items required to exit the pipe  here

Instruction on how to do so is found  here  

Does the wall mount come with the mounting bracket and all necessary hardware?

Yes it does, it comes with everything needed; the mounting bracket, screws, bushing, and washers.

When do I need to use the wall mount with fresh air intake?

Normally the air is replaced by opening a window slightly. 

The wall mount with fresh air intake will bring air from outside to the area where the stove draws its air from and this would be used in spaces that do not have a window to open or in spaces where you did want to open a window. It will bring the replacement through a 2” flex hose you would connect to the manifold found under the wall mount.

How much does it cost for shipping?

The shipping cost varies depending on what you order and how far it needs to travel to reach your location. To get a shipping quote we suggest you add the products you would like to purchase, input your information and it will give you an exact price with taxes and shipping included. 

How long does it take to receive my Cubic once purchased?

Once the order is placed it will take 1-3 business days to ship.

After the order leaves our facility, it will take 4-7 business days to arrive for Canadian orders.

U.S and international orders will take 1-3 business days to arrive once shipped. Once it ships, it is up to the shipping company to ship it on time. 

Do I need to pay tax?

For Canadian orders, tax is collected at the time of purchase.

For U.S clients there is no tax.

For international clients, tax will be paid upon arrival of the item - if applicable.

How is it shipped?

In Canada it will be Canada post who does the delivery.

For U.S and international orders, it will be DHL who will do the delivery. 

What if the items arrive damaged?

If the items arrive damaged. Please take a photo and send it to us at  [email protected] . We will assess the best course of action.

What if I need to return or exchange an item?

For returns, please refer to our  return policy.

If you need to exchange an item that you have already received in exchange for another (ex. wall mount to floor mount), please send us an e-mail.

General Information

How draft is produced & how to reduce it.

Draft is generated in the flue pipe. When you first light a fire in the stove, the heat warms up the flue and air climbs upward, creating a convection effect. This upward pull of air is what creates the draw of air into the fire box allowing the stove to function. The flue pipe being the “engine” of the stove is why a double wall flue pipe is required. 

The double wall constructions maintains flue gas temperatures which greatly improves the draft and pipe cleanliness. There are many factors when it comes to draft creation such as; the temperature of the flue, the length of the flue system, weather conditions, and the space where the stove is installed among other factors.

Draft is reduced dramatically when any bends are introduced.

This is why we do not recommend to introduce any elbows in the flue system.

Draft can also be reduced if you do not run the flue pipe past the highest point of the roof, due to a lack of moving air over the cap. This is crucial for optimal stove performance and safety.

Types Of Flue Pipe

There are three main types of flue pipes: Single Wall, Double Wall and Insulated. We suggest to only use our 3" double wall flue pipe in conjunction with our insulated pipe to prevent the cooling of the gasses and for optimal draft. 

Our stoves require a 3” double wall flue pipe.

A single wall flue pipe should never be used on our stoves. 

A double wall flue pipe will maintain the temperature of the flue gases as hot as possible, to allow for proper draft and to have the least amount of creosote buildup.

The pipe should be insulated as it goes through the ceiling roof and all the way to the cap. This can be achieved with our insulated pipes. 

What Is Creosote? + Cleaning Process

Creosote is created by the process of burning wood. 

The buildup of creosote inside the flue pipe and the cap will happen over time. Whenever flue gases come in

contact with a cold surface, (either the pipe or the cap), the creosote will condensate and stick to that surface. 

This is why you must check the flue pipe regularly to determine the rate at which this process happens so you can create a cleaning schedule in accordance with your setup. 

It is recommended to clean every week or so, until a schedule has been created.

The rate of this process is dependent on many factors; quality of wood, the type of flue pipe you use, temperature of the stove and flue pipe, as well as how you set the settings on the stove. 

As mentioned above, keeping the flue gases hot will keep the build up to a minimum and using a double wall flue pipe while insulating the section of flue pipe on the exterior of the space -  will help keep the flue cleaner for a longer period.

See cleaning instructions here

Exiting through a wall

Our stove and flue pipe are quite small. Any elbow you introduce creates turbulence, restricting the draft which reduces the performance of the stove. When you exit out a wall you would introduce two elbows.  One to go out, and one to go up. Also since you exit at a lower point in the space. 

You have more flue pipe outside than if you exited out the roof. This would require you to insulate a much larger portion of your flue pipe. This is a more expensive set up, it requires more work, and you will end up with a lesser performing stove. For these reasons it is not suggest to exit through a wall.

How to maintain a clear window

This is dependent on a few factors that are important to keep in mind if your goal is to maintain a cleanliness of the stove.

Firstly, the amount of heat in the fire box. Secondly, if you are burning dirty or humid wood and also the amount of wood you put into the stove. 

These are all contributing factors to consider. If you add too much wood at once you will drop the temperature of the stove and the glass will darken.

Once it comes back up to temperature the glass will begin to clean it self. When reloading the firebox, pull the coals to the front (without blocking the air intake) and place the wood toward the back and this will allow the window to stay clearer for longer. 

Also when you introduce a new piece of wood, it can take 5-10 minutes for the moisture/humidity, and oils to be released. During this time you will see a darkening of the glass due to the humidity being released and will clean it self once the wood has its moisture removed.

Our stoves are insulated, this reflects the heat back into the stove improving the functionality of the secondary combustion system. It also holds heat and radiates it over a longer period of time.

Secondary combustion

The secondary combustion works by pulling oxygen from the secondary air intake, mixing it with the gases produced by the burning wood and gets reignited. This allows the stove to use energy that would otherwise be lost. 

This system works when the stove is up to temperature. You can control the secondary combustion by opening and closing the slider found on the underside of the stove. Pulling the lever forward towards you to open, push towards the stove to close. 

Quotes and shipping

For a price or shipping quote, simply select the items you wish to purchase, input your information and it will give you an exact price with no obligation to buy!

Lighting the fire/extinguishing the fire

When starting a fire in a Cubic Mini Wood Stove it is made easy by placing 2 or 3 balls of crumpled up paper and a few small pieces of wood on top. Light the paper and the little pieces of wood will catch fire. Once that happens let it go for a few minutes to allow the pipe to heat and start creating draft. 

You can then go ahead and introduce a piece of wood. It is suggested to leave the door open until the piece catches fire, then you can close the door. Once your fire is lit it is suggested to fully open the primary air vent to allow the flue pipe to heat up as much as possible.After 20 minutes or so you may reduce the primary air intake and open the secondary air intake to activate the secondary combustion system which will burn hotter and cleaner. 

When you wish to put out the fire, simply close all air vents. You will see the flame die down immediately and in a little while the embers will die as well.

Complete and total combustion of fuels

With normal use of the stove, the ashes out is normally only needed every few days. To prevent the buildup of ash too quickly you must wait until the wood is almost completely consumed before adding more wood. 

If you add wood prematurely ashes will build up quicker than they are supposed to.

Types of Fuel

With a Cubic Mini Wood Stove there are a few fuel types you may use; soft wood, hard wood, pressed logs, and coal. You can use soft wood to get the fire going. Once it is lit you can use hard wood. Pressed logs are a great choice as they are easy to cut to size, and they also burn very hot and clean.

You must read the package to see if it can be used in an air tight stove and that it is not made with glue. Coal is another choice and is similar to using wood.

Reason for Draft Issues

In most cases a lack of draft is caused by not maintaining flue gas temperatures, having an elbow or worst, to have two - or to have a large portion of non-insulated flue pipe outside.

If those are not the cause of the draft problem then it is most likely air coming and going from the wrong area. If you have a window open downwind and not upwind the air will come in down the pipe and want to exit through the window instead of coming in through the window and out the pipe. 

This can be resolved by opening a different window or orienting either your boat or RV in the proper direction if possible. Another reason could be due to an obstacle near by the cap. If this is the cause, you would have to run the flue pipe up and above the obstacle allowing for free moving air to pass over the cap.

If your pipe is not maintaining its flue gas temperature, that can also cause problems. However, as mentioned above you can insulate it to combat that cooling effect.

wood stove for sailboat

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Cruising World Logo

How to Select a Marine Stove

  • By Lynda Morris Childress
  • Updated: May 7, 2020

range top

There’s no question about it: On cruising sailboats, an efficient, safe marine stove is as important as good sails, functioning systems and top-notch safety gear. The ability to prepare and enjoy home-cooked meals on board makes for a happy and healthy crew, and at the heart of it all is a reliable stove.

Many owners of pre-owned vessels have inherited the stove that came with the boat—with either happy or hair-pulling results. If you’re in the latter category, or if you wish to retire your once-reliable galley workhorse, it might be time to ponder an upgrade. There are many considerations, but one of the first things you should decide is: Which type of marine stove?

For upgrades, the three most prevalent types of marine stoves rely on liquid petroleum gas (LPG, or propane), nonpressurized alcohol and, in recent years, electric. Other types, such as kerosene and compressed natural gas (CNG) burners, have fallen out of favor for various reasons: Kerosene spills are extremely flammable, burners require priming before lighting, the fuel smells unpleasant, and the odor often permeates interior fabrics and the food itself. While some sailors still swear by it—it’s widely available and burns fairly hot—use of kerosene is waning. CNG made its appearance (along with LPG) in the 1980s, and early on was touted as the “safe gas.” Unlike LPG, it’s lighter than air and can’t settle in the bilges, though fumes can collect in other areas of the boat that aren’t well ventilated—and it still can explode. Today it’s hard to find and rarely used.

Butane, another form of liquid gas, has been used for years to fuel small, portable one- or two-burner stoves equipped with small canisters of fuel. Popular on smaller sailboats for simple cooking, and on some cruising boats as an inexpensive backup to the existing galley stove, it can be useful for preparing coffee, tea or one-pot meals without heating up the galley too much, but probably isn’t under consideration for an upgrade.

Diesel stoves are not widely considered either, but if you dislike propane and alcohol, stoves and ovens that use diesel forced-air technology, such as those made by Wallas in Finland (imported by Scan Marine ), might be worth a look. Prices range from $2,500 to $5,000.

Marine Propane Stoves

On most production cruising boats built from the mid-1980s on, marine propane stoves and ovens have been the rule. When you’re considering an upgrade, they are an excellent choice, though there remain skeptics who are either unwilling to install and maintain a propane system, or are downright terrified of propane and actually switch to an alcohol system for precisely this reason. LPG is heavier than air, and fumes can settle in the bilge if proper installation, usage and safety protocols aren’t followed, creating the potential for explosion. Most who use propane aboard safely feel that the benefits outweigh the risks: It’s available worldwide, the cost is reasonable, it burns hot and cooks food quickly, it’s odorless while burning, and it’s easy and safe to use as long as you practice strict safety measures. Propane stoves and systems on U.S. boats must meet American Boat & Yacht Council standards, which outline specific parameters for safe installation and use. The West Marine Advisor also offers tips on safe installation.

Marine propane stoves have improved over the years; most newer models have built-in safety thermocouples that automatically stop the flow of gas within seconds if a flame is not present. This feature, plus other required and optional safety measures—such as a leak-detection system, a dedicated exterior tank-storage locker, a simple electric solenoid switch that allows the gas to be shut off manually and remotely, and a vapor detector—are key to safe operation, along with careful use by all aboard. On today’s new-stove market, retailers report that the Force 10 gimbaled two- and three-burner series are top sellers. For a new two- or three-burner range, you’ll need to budget between $1,000 and $2,000, depending on make and model. If you’re short on galley space but still want propane, Eno makes compact two- and three-burner built-in and gimbaled propane cooktops, which sell for $300 to $400.

Marine Alcohol Stoves

Alcohol stoves burn denatured alcohol, and over the years they’ve suffered a bad rap: Older, pressurized models achieved widespread notoriety not for their cooking ability, but for their uncanny knack for setting anything above them (sometimes including the cook) on fire. Pressurized stoves were famously difficult to light; they required pumping and priming with alcohol to get the burners hot enough for sustained cooking, which often led to flare-ups and disaster. Compounding the problem was that an alcohol flame is nearly invisible, resulting in burns from touching a burner that was invisibly lit. Fortunately for fans of this fuel, newer, nonpressurized, highly functional models of marine alcohol stoves are available to eliminate the danger as well as the priming process. The Dometic Origo system uses canisters fitted with wool “wicks” that soak up the alcohol, allowing the fumes to be lit in a controlled way that avoids flare-ups. In addition to being nonexplosive, alcohol stoves are easy to install; every component needed comes with the stove.

But while alcohol has advantages, it also has drawbacks: Like kerosene, it has an odor when the stove is in use that makes some people queasy. It burns at a much lower temperature than either kerosene or propane, using more fuel and taking longer to cook food or even boil water, but fans of alcohol stoves claim they don’t notice or mind the slightly longer cooking times. Though more expensive overall than propane, stove alcohol is widely available in the U.S.; worldwide, it’s harder to come by. Nonetheless, alcohol marine stove proponents cite not having to worry about a possible onboard explosion and ease of installation as two benefits that outweigh all the drawbacks combined. According to retailers, the Dometic Origo 6000 is today’s top-selling alcohol stove/oven, followed closely by Dometic Origo stove-top units. New ranges are priced between $1,500 and $1,800; stove-tops are in the vicinity of $200 to $350.

Electric Marine Stoves

Until recently, electric stoves and ovens were found mainly on large powerboats and superyachts and would not have been a possibility for the average sailboat. But as new boats equipped with generators as standard equipment make their way into the mainstream market, and as more owners of older boats retrofit gensets, electric marine ranges and fixed or portable ceramic cooktops are making inroads. Most U.S.-made boat stoves require 120 volts; if a boat spends much of its nonsailing time at marinas with shore power available, or if running the generator each time the stove is used isn’t a problem, it may be a viable alternative. The price range for a new two- or three-burner electric marine stove and oven is $1,500 to $2,000; for one- and two-burner electric and induction cooktops, from the simple to the sublime, the price ranges from $100 to $900.

oven

Induction Cooking

The newest trend in electric stoves is induction cooking, which cooks food using electromagnetic induction rather than conduction from electric heat or a flame. In simplified terms, when you turn on the stove burner, a metal coil beneath a ceramic cooktop uses alternating current to produce a magnetic field. When magnetic cookware is placed on top, voilà! The pot heats up, but the cooktop remains cool. The advantages seem endless: Induction stoves drastically reduce fire and burn risk, as the cooktop itself does not heat up; they don’t warm up the boat; they cook food fast and efficiently; and because it doesn’t ever get hot, the cooktop is easy to keep clean (and can double as extra counter space). One disadvantage to most electric ceramic cooktops on boats is the lack of rails or clamps to keep pots in place. Another is that induction cooktops require use of specific cookware with magnetic properties; when you replace your existing stove with one, you might also have to replace your pots. Kenyon Marine has addressed the problem of keeping pots on the stove with its innovative new Silken2 two-burner Trimline induction cooktop; it comes with a fitted, patented nonskid silicone mat that can be used during cooking. Another popular induction cooktop is the single-burner unit by Furrion. This technology is new and still evolving. If you’re on the fence about an upgrade, keep a close eye on marine induction stoves — they just may be the wave of the future.

Before You Buy a Marine Stove

Before you start to shop, answer some basic questions: How much stove do you need? How much room do you have in your galley? Where do you plan to cruise? The stove you select depends largely on how—and how often—you use your boat. If it’s a small boat with limited galley space, used mostly for daysails, weekend cruises, and the occasional overnight not far from home waters, a simple stove-top system (nonpressurized alcohol, butane or, if you have shore power, electric or combination alcohol-electric) might suffice. If it’s a midsize boat used for extended vacation or liveaboard cruising, you’ll likely want—and have room for—a marine stove with an oven. If there are only two of you aboard, a two-burner stove and oven might suffice; if you’re a family, consider a three-burner. Measure your space carefully and, unless you want to undertake a major carpentry project, be sure you select a boat stove that fits. (If you own a European-made boat, you’ll likely need to order a metric size.) If you cruise outside the U.S., choose a marine stove that uses fuel that’s available and affordable everywhere you plan to visit.

Depending on where and how you sail, there are also some stove safety features to consider. Almost all marine stoves and ovens are gimbaled, allowing them to swing back and forth, essentially remaining level when the boat is heeled (or rolling at anchor). Your best bet will be to go for a gimbaled replacement. Other safety features should include a sturdy, built-in safety rail around the outer edge to guard against pots sliding off the stove-top; a set of pot clamps to keep pots in place while cooking underway; and a latch that allows the oven door to be securely locked in place.

Choosing and installing a new marine stove doesn’t have to mean jumping from the frying pan into the fire. If you know exactly what you want before you shop and do your research on features and installation, outfitting your sailboat with a new stove that meets your needs will be worth its weight in comfort — not to mention delicious home-cooked meals.

Lynda Morris Childress and her husband, Kostas Ghiokas, cruise and charter their Atlantic 70 ­cutter, Stressbuster , throughout the Greek Islands.

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Once the overall scheme was signed off by all, it was time to start with the surgery. Any sailor knows the trauma of adding a new hole to the boat, even above waterline… and this one was a doozy: a very large opening in .2″ steel topped with Treadmaster, backed with a very dense .75″ marine ply, and blocked for the extricated pole amidst an expanse of foam insulation filling a grid of steel ribs. After much head-scratching and calling out reference marks ‘twixt deck and pilothouse, we punched a pilot hole, then broke out the jigsaw. Here, Andrew’s assistant Jeff from Indian Summer II is carefully slurping up any remaining steel bits to prevent future rust spots…

wood stove for sailboat

The guys headed back to the shop to conjure a few parts, including a trim ring that compensates for the 5° camber of the deck and supports the beautiful cast bronze deck iron . This was all bedded in place using screws for clamping pressure, prompting the first of many comments that it looks like it was meant to be that way.  (2012 update: I later had serious leak problems because the Treadmaster was not cut back far enough to allow a fillet of sealant… and various sealing problems developed including failure of the primer-Dolphinite interface and a crack in the trim ring from too much screw tension on the curved deck surface. I finally pulled the ring, which popped off with no effort, gave it a proper coat of wood sealer followed by Brightside polyurethane, then bedded it with 4200 after cleaning the old residue) :

wood stove for sailboat

This made for a nicely finished exterior appearance, but from below we could still see the wood “underlayment” – meaning that it would be exposed to radiant heat as well. The hole had been lined with copper sheeting as a first step:

wood stove for sailboat

In a flash of inspiration, Andrew conjured a pair of aluminum components that would further reflect heat while allowing cooling airflow. It also prompted one of many amusing photographic moments, given all the awkward angles necessary when working on a boat…

wood stove for sailboat

With the hole prepped, it was time to get the stove mounted. They used the cannibalized wood from the original pole to frame out the plywood wall at the end of the galley counter, allowing a clever hack in which a routed channel created clearance for a row of 1/4-20 T-nuts. The whole assembly is thus removable without dragging out the refrigerator that’s on the other side of that wall… a process that is complicated further by having to remove the foot pumps under the galley sink to provide enough fridge-movement clearance to get an arm into the cavity. Boats are for contortionists, something I am most emphatically not .

When the shelf was installed, Andrew immediately insisted that I park on it to convince myself that it is sufficiently robust…

wood stove for sailboat

With that test passed, he added a stainless heatshield to protect the wood… and then the stove was centered and bolted to the shelf, its tripod legs insuring that no amount of heat-induced casting warpage would cause rocking. A few leveling washers induced general positioning consensus, then it was down to the final steps.

Pipefitting is something of an art, it turns out, and I was surprised at how fiddly this part was… but patience and collective insistence on perfection eventually yielded a smooth and well-considered run. Here we are eyeballin’ and tweakin’…

wood stove for sailboat

Now you can see the final configuration of the deck-iron interface, with the heat shield spaced away from the headliner giving a strong sense of the etymology of stove-pipe hat :

wood stove for sailboat

Topside, we have a couple of operational choices. The smoke head can be plugged directly into the deck iron for a low-profile look like this:

wood stove for sailboat

Or, as is the case at the moment in the oppressive wind and rain of an incoming cold front, we can insert a 2-foot pipe section to improve draft and disperse the startup smoke above the level of the dodger:

wood stove for sailboat

And it’s done! With the pipe all fitted and already showing a patina from the test-firing, here are three views of the finished Little Cod installation on Nomadness . From the passage to the aft cabin:

wood stove for sailboat

Lying on the sole looking up (with the draft damper visible in the angled section):

wood stove for sailboat

And from the center of the pilothouse, showing the loading door on the end:

wood stove for sailboat

And, you see those little holes on the front corners of the top shelf surface? One of the major issues here is safety — not just keeping skin off the dangerously hot stove pipe, but keeping fast-moving knees off the sharp shelf corners, one hand attached to a handhold at all times whilst bounding along in a seaway, and careening bodies off the stove itself. Removing the original pole, which was necessary to allow pipe to pass through the deck in the only available location, complicated the problem; it’s a large enough cabin that one could get thrown off-balance easily without something solid to hold on to at every stage of a traverse from one point to another.

I have added a few more strategically-placed handholds around the boat, but the central fixture is a sort of “caging” of the stove made with 7/8″ stainless rail and Sea Dog stainless fittings .

The other huge issue, actually the biggest trade-off of this whole project, was the impact on engine and generator access. Massive sole panels have always lifted to the 90° position and locked in place with springs, but now they only make it to 60° and have to be held up manually… obviously inadequate, although the most-frequently serviced bits are still easy to reach (Racors, tank-selection valves, oil filters and dipsticks, the sticky shutoff rail on the injector pump that needs an occasional tickle, coolant caps, and so on). The raw-water impeller on the main engine, already a major pain to change, is now more so, and I shudder to think of having to change out the starter with this reduced clearance.

We’ll immediately fashion a couple of latches to support the access panels from the stove shelf, but if serious surgery is necessary, it will be necessary to unscrew the hinges and lift the units completely out (removing the stove as well if major gymnastics are going to be involved). Fortunately, it’s all serviceable by design.

Other than that detail, I am thoroughly delighted with this new life-support component in the technomadic escape pod. An efficient heat source is now readily harvestable, and even a small fire renders the cabin cozy without the Webasto roar or the shore-power requirements of an electric heater. And to anyone who Googled their way to this page whilst contemplating a stove for their boat… I can warmly recommend Andrew and his products. He exudes an old-fashioned sense of quality craftsmanship rarely seen these days, and this little stove of time-tested design is clearly going to outlast the captain of the ship.

wood stove for sailboat

Updates…

First, in the accessories department, a woodstove thermometer is essential. I use the Rutland one, which I got on Amazon, and it works well (though the Inferno is now getting better reviews):

wood stove for sailboat

Second, I finally got around to building the safety cage around the stove, and it has been a surprisingly pleasant addition to the boat… actually better than the post that had to be removed for the installation. I used standard 7/8″ stainless rail and fittings (I bought mine from Defender).

Third, it’s pretty easy to light with the normal methods (paper and little scraps of kindling), but if you want an effective shortcut, try these little fire-starters. Actually, I usually make my own with sawdust and melted wax, poured into egg cartons… but that’s a messy job and kind of a nuisance. The commercial ones work great, store forever, and save a lot of fiddling. The ones at that link should be broken into quarters, good for 144 fires.

The heavy stainless shelf took threads nicely, and where the angled braces meet the thinner heat shield they are bolted deeply into the supporting structure. I haven’t tested it with airborne body weight yet (and hope never to!) but it easily handles the dynamic loads of rough conditions and grabbing it hard to prevent a fall. The height was optimized for leaning, and the top rail will get decorative hitching some rainy night.

wood stove for sailboat

The latest additions (2012) are a Caframo Ecofan  and a window! The fan is not as hearty an air-mover as a dedicated DC one, but who wants to cable and listen to another motor? This uses a thermoelectric element to generate power from the difference between the hot base and the relatively cool fins, and does a nice job of gently moving air across the stove and distributing it around a small boat cabin. I had considered mounting mine to one of the disks (with high-temp adhesive, given the enamel), but thought better of it… that’s precious horizontal surface most of the time and the fan lives in a foam nest off-season or underway.

As to the glass window… Andrew now offers a glass-front option when you buy one of these, but quoted me $400 for a retrofit. As much as I wanted one, that was a bit too rich on my current budget for a purely aesthetic item. This launched me on a lengthy quest, culminating at last in a source for custom pyroceramic shapes (not glass) that can take about 1300° F continuous and 10% overtemp for a short time… a healthy margin of error for a wood stove that will probably never see more than 750° F for more than a few YIKES moments as you frantically reduce the draft. It also survives thermal shock very well; here’s mine along with the Caframo fan:

wood stove for sailboat

It casts a beautiful warm light around the cabin, reflecting nicely off the overhead, and it’s great to see the fire without having to open the door!  I still think it would be better to get the glass front option at the time you buy a new stove, but if you already have a Sardine , Little Cod , or Halibut … you can buy a piece of 3/16″ Neoceram, 6″ diameter, with pencil-grind edges from One Day Glass . (I was reselling them for a while, but don’t really need to be in the loop… gotta choose my battles!) It will pick up soot from the flames, but is easy to clean; just use a wad of wet newspaper and some of the ash from the firebox.

Follow-up (2013) note on fuel

When I had a domestic woodstove, I avoided burning driftwood because of the salt content… mixed with sticky creosote, it leaves a hygroscopic layer that absorbs moisture year-round and can quickly destroy cast iron or non-stainless stovepipe. Since this stove is enameled inside and out, I have not worried too much about that, though it is still not ideal.

Researching this recently for a discussion thread on Facebook, I turned up an interesting article (no longer online) from a chimney sweeping expert that advises against using one of my favorite fuels… mill ends. Clean, dry, neat-stacking, and often free, these cut-off chunks of dimensional lumber are really tempting, though I have noticed that they usually burn insanely hot. Now I know why (and they have other dangers as well, including salt and some nasty chemical).

Also, this classic book is worth having in your library: The Woodburner’s Encyclopedia (1976), usually pretty cheap on Amazon.

2017 Footnote

I sold the lovely Nomadness in 2016, and happily, the Little Cod did not fit the new owner’s cruising plans. I’m now installing it in a project shed near my new mobile digitizing lab, having swallowed the anchor.

Cheers, and stay warm! -Steve

29 Comments

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damn, you cold water, monohull guys really DO like all the comforts of home :-)LOLOL!

OMG. I have become a monohull guy, haven’t I? Never saw that coming.

You may want to have someone who does fuel polishing to come and do a cleaning on your tanks. They treat your remaining fuel with biocide and cleaners and then pipe the fuel through filters to remove the gunk in the tank as well as the algae.

Then a treatment with biocide after that will keep the growth at bay.

Stumblingthunder

Sumblingthunder – yes, I am looking into that. Actually, I can polish onboard (two Racors and a system of valves with a transfer pump lets me move fuel among tanks, or even pickup in one and return to another while the engine is running), and I have been using biocide with the new stuff (the clean aft tank, which I just refilled yesterday). But that’s not as good as a proper tank cleaning… the question is whether or not such an extreme and expensive operation is necessary. I don’t want to wait to find out until the boat is getting thrashed in foul conditions, shaking it loose and clogging the filters…

Thanks for the comment!

Well its been a little over a month, hows the stove working out? Im looking into one for next year, and my biggest concern is that it can hold a fire overnight. Fatsco makes a tiny tot coal stove that I read an article on Good Old Boat that says it can be banked and they still have hot coals in the morning… whats your experience?

thanks deryk

Hi Deryk…

I haven’t yet tried a full overnight load… now doing the winter-moorage dance, making weekly trips to work on projects. The fires have been wonderful and the boat cozy… and it’s a great little incinerator. I’ll post when I have done some proper survival-heating!

Cheers, Steve

Just a thought that occurred regarding access below the stove. Would it work to cut that panel in half, then use a piano hinge on top to put it back together? That would allow you to fold it over itself, then open and should minimize your clearance issues. It should also be strong and fairly inobtrusive. I have brought brass hinge at Home Depot before at a reasonable price. Hope it works better than having to remove the hinges. Best of luck.

Lauren Neher

A few months have passed now, and there have been enough firings for me to have a better sense of performance. The other night it was subfreezing in the harbor, and I kept the stove going at about 450 degrees surface temp all evening. At bedtime, I stoked it full and minimized both intake and stack flow… 8 hours later when I stumbled to the galley for coffee, it was still too hot to rest my hand on (though I did not try to fire it up without kindling, as it was getting sunny).

In short, it works beautifully!

Hello, Just curious what kind of stove pipe you used? I am only finding 4 inch pipe that is for HVAC, and not for wood burning units. Thanks, Jon

Jon – I used the pipe provided by the Marinestove folks; here is the accessories page that details the pipe, shielding, bends, smoke heads, and related parts.

Cheers, and stay warm! Steve

Glad to see that your install is evolving to suit your needs. Its that element of customization that our spirited customers bring to their particular application which gives me an added boost in the shop every day. Did I mention Idaho Energy Logs to you for super long burn times? A Codger (someone who uses a Little Cod) down at Fisheries Supply in Seattle has reported incredible burn times. I need to try them. When we get into these long burn times it becomes all the more important that everyone heed the smoke/co2 alarm install recommendation. As you have witnessed boats can be tricky with air/chimney flow dynamics. Dorade vents and the like can throw a monkey wrench into the mix. Hence important to have an audible alarm alerting you to a drastic negative change in your flow dynamics. Topic shift. What do you do for hot water ? Any novel designs lurking for integrating the stove into the mix. Folks ask us from time to time and it would be a great option to be able to offer them.

Look forward to your Springtime assessment of life aboard with COD.

Cheers, Andrew / NSW

HI Andrew – great to hear from you! We just had our first burn of the season the other night, and it was quite pleasant to feel that pervasive warmth (so much nicer than the other heat sources aboard).

We picked up some very dense manufactured logs; don't know if they are Idaho. I will try them and let you know my impressions.

Thanks for the reminder on the smoke/CO2 sensors – that is in the plan for the shipnet, but I will get the hardware aboard now. Know of a combined model that is low power?

Hot water: I got rid of the demand water heater that came with the boat, installed with such a short stack that it didn't draft properly and spewed humidity/CO into the cabin. Aboard now is an Isotherm, which uses either AC (700W, well within Inverter range) or engine coolant loop. I don't have much experience with it yet, but would enjoy playing with a preheater coupled to the Cod.

Your stove always elicits admiring comments from visitors, even when just sitting there cold. I'm happy to have it aboard.

Cheers! Steve

Great job Steve! Great stove!.I am an Italian liveaboard, for 4 years in Venice (freezing cold and humid in winter) and always heating my days and night with an old wood burning stove. It makes the difference aboard. All my best and sincere compliments for your useful blog I am definitely linking your blog to mine. I row and sail to protect the water and invite people to a sustainable way of travelling and living.

Giacomo – Grazie mille!

Thank you Steve. E' un mio piacere.

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I’m building a 200 sf meditation cabin on land, adobe brick. I live in northern New Mexico where worst winter temps rarely go below 0 degrees F. Will the Little Cod heat it adequately? I genuinely hope so, because I’d love to make this work out. I’m interested in the model that is red and has the glass fire door. Should we talk? Bob

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Bob – I certainly think that it would work just fine in that space. The person you should contact is not me, however, but Andrew … the builder of the stoves. Sounds like a great application, and the red would be gorgeous.

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How is the draft working on your little cod? I was considering going with a 4″ to 5″ adapter for a wider draft. Do you find the 4″ sufficient? Will it get a decent draft even when the setup is in “low profile” (minus the exterior chimney addition) mode?

Just want to know before I finalize my install plans, thanks!

Eric – I have never had any issues related to inadequate draft (if anything, it can be a little hard to turn down if you get it too fired up!). For this size box, I don’t see any advantage to expanding to a 5″ pipe… that’s getting into home-scale stove territory. As to the “low profile” mode, I have not experimented with that enough to answer you. I should! That is certainly how I would like it to be set up if I were in the mode of sailing/anchoring through winter months.

Cheers and stay warm! Steve

Well if you do get around to trying it, do let me know. I would much prefer to have it set up that way then have a tall chimney pipe sticking out.

I have no doubt we will both be quite warm this season 🙂

One last question actually. Do you know where they got the spacer hardware that got your pipe through the roof? I have been having a hard time finding one that will connect to 4″ pipe.

Thanks again!

Eric – you mean the deck iron? That is what the pipe connects to; no intermediate hardware. The heat-reflecting disc and hole liner were fabricated…

You can get the deck irons for 3″ or 4″ pipe from Andrew.

http://marinestove.com/Accessories.htm

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It is a lovely looking stove! How is it working out, say when you’re away from civilization and other heating sources and the temperature is below freezing? Pros and cons?

Does it get much untidy in the cabin from handling and stacking the wood, or coal?

I am surprised it could still be warm after 8 hours. We have a stove in the kitchen of our house, and the wood burns down very quickly, I’d say less than 2 hours, and in the morning it’s chill.

Does the boat get dirty on the outside from the smoke?

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I just fell in love with the neoceram/pyroceram window concept! We’ve got a Little Cod manufactured by the Enterprise-Fawcett foundry located in Sackville, NB, and instead of two round ports on the top surface its got one large rectangular port (the stove also came with a rectangular grilling rack that can be put in place of the solid rectangular port). I’m going to look into the possibility of getting a piece of neoceram cut to fit in place of the cast iron port but before I do I’d love to know more about your experience with your round pyroceram window. I think I’d personally go the neoceram route given the fact its used for cooktops and looks to be able to take more of a beating than pyroceram, a factor given the large area of our rectangular opening.

So, how’s your’s working out and what thickness of material did you go with (I’m assuming 3/16″)?

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NICE JOB, looking at your page for ideas for an install like this for an airstream trailer, this is great!

Hi Johan, and sorry I took so long to reply! Just got through another winter…

I have been lazily using other heat sources at the dock (mostly), so I can’t report much on day-to-day operation over an extended period. From my casual use, however, I can make a few observations:

Untidy in the cabin: yes. Wood storage is kind of a nuisance, and makes me wish I had more stowage space. Mill ends are neat, but I believe I linked above to an article about their hazards (dang); harvested firewood will need to be mostly kept in a covered place outside with just the current inventory in the cabin.

Below freezing use: no problem. My boat is 44′ and this heats well.

Warm after 8 hours: not in my experience… I am willing to believe that it might be possible with practice, however, though that is pushing it (from my years with daily use of other wood stoves).

Dirty outside: I have not had a problem with that. The smoke head is on the extension pipe, and I tie the boom off to the other side.

Hello, Kai…

Glad you like the window idea! I did in fact go with neoceram… a 6-inch disc, 3/16″ thick. My only issue has been that with cooler/casual/decorative fires instead of serious hot ones, it blackens with soot. Fortunately, that is easy to clean… no need to buy the special stuff that is available; just use a crumpled wad of newspaper, moisten it, pick up some of the ash in the bottom of the stove, and give it a quick scrub followed by a wipedown with a paper towel.

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Hi, I am interested in installing the “sardine” model wood stove in my first boat (Fisher37). I am concerned about sparks exiting from the chimney and setting my neighbours’ (or my own) sails on fire. Does the spark arrestor (smoke head) completely stop sparks or do you have to be very selective about your solid fuel. Cheers, Glenn

HI Glenn – I have never seen any issues with that except for a little sparkly feistiness during startup (but nothing that would be able to ignite nearby fuels). The Sardine is a sweet unit!

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Unforgettable Fire, LLC

The Kimberly™ Wood Stove

The best tiny wood stove to heat your cabin, rv, tiny house, skoolie, or boat…, big heat from this tiny indoor wood burning stove, when longer burn times and closer clearances are essential.

KImbelry wood stove 1

Kimberly™ In A Client’s Home

Quick facts about kimberly™.

Kimberly tiny wood stove in a tiny house

Kimberly™ In A Tiny House

COMMONLY USED TO HEAT: RV’s, 5th Wheels, Airstreams Tiny Houses & Small cabins Bus conversions

COOKTOP: Can easily reach 1000-1500° Fahrenheit. Use a trivet to keep your food from cooking too quickly!

ESTIMATED BTU’s: Up to 40,000

LOG SIZE: Can burn one log at a time up to 4-inches diameter, up to 9 inches in length depending on height of embers.

CLEARANCES: Rear: 12-inches measured from rear of stove or 6-inches measured from rear of pipe Sides: 6-inches Front: 18-inches

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: Provision for outside air Emissions 3.2 grams/hour Non-catalytic UL Listed

KIMBERLY™ INSTALLATION DIAGRAMS

  • Diagrams 1 - 2
  • Diagrams 3 - 4
  • Diagrams 5 - 6
  • Diagrams 8 - 9
  • Diagrams 10 - 11
  • Specifications

Kimberly small wood burning stove installation diagrams 1 & 2

Height : 25.5 inches (64.77 cm) Diameter : 10 inches (25.40 cm) Front Door Size : 4 inches x 9 inches (10.16 cm x 22.86 cm) Weight : 56 pounds (25.4 kg) Maximum Heat Output : Estimated 40,000 BTU’s/hour Size of Heated Area : up to 1500 square feet of well-insulated space Firebox Capacity : .2 cubic feet Firebox Size: 6 inches x 11 inches (15.24 cm x 27.94 cm) Maximum Log Length : 10 inches (25.40 cm) Maximum Log Diameter: 4 inches (10.16 cm) Flue Exit : Back exit only Provisions For Outside Air Intake Kit : Bottom of base or rear of base Estimated Efficiency : 68%

Be sure to check out our  Katydid ™ small wood burning stove and our Kri kit ™ wood burning stove if you have been shopping for a micro wood stove , cabin wood stoves for sale , a  small efficient wood stove,  or  the best small wood stove for a cabin . Krikit™ offers a bigger firebox and optional add-on shielding as alternative for RV wood stoves for sale . Katydid™ and Krikit™ offer bigger fireboxes as heating options when our Kimberly™ tiny wood stove is too small. 

The fine print.

Ordering Policies Copyright Terms of Service Legal Privacy Policy California Prop 65

Mailing Address

Unforgettable Fire, LLC PO Box 456 Little Switzerland, NC 28749

Call Toll-Free: 1-855-872-7868

VIDEO

  1. How To Use an Alcohol Stove on a Sailboat #floatinghouse

  2. Ultralight Backpacking Stove from Tuna Can

  3. part 133.householdwood stove winter heating artifact Winter essential heating artifact wood stove

  4. Budget DIY sailboat heating

  5. Peanut Butter Cookies From the Wood Stove on the Sailboat! #liveaboardlife

  6. Wood stove mini small for tent, camper, RV, VAN, boats, campervan, mobile tiny home. Choose!

COMMENTS

  1. Wood Stoves for Boats

    The Dwarf 3kW. Our smallest stove, the Dwarf 3kW, is a great option for smaller boats and milder climates where less heat is required. The compact size is perfect for fitting in tight spaces. The tall firebox, airtight controls, and secondary burn technology give the Dwarf 3kW stove the longest burn time in the 3kW size.

  2. Wood Stove Heating For Sailboats

    Wood Stove Heating For Sailboats. Within the first 5 minutes of this video, there are several ideas that might be helpful to heat a sailboat for cool or cold weather. The rest of the video tells how to install a wood stove, similar, possibly, to what the good Captain Slocum might have used. At the end of the video, Rebecca explains why the ...

  3. Navigator Wood Stoves Provide Classic Heating and Cooking Onboard

    Formally of Brooklyn, N.Y., and now based on Orcas Island, Navigator produces three compact wood-burning, cast-iron stove models for use on land and at sea. Originally designed for use aboard boats, the scaled-down stoves are also popular for cabins, RVs, and other small structures on terra firma. Two of the Navigator stove patterns-the Sardine ...

  4. The Little Cod Wood Stove from Navigator Stove Works USA

    The Little Cod wood stove is a robust and compact marine stove, crafted from high-quality cast iron. Its sturdy construction ensures durability and efficiency, making it a reliable heating solution for boats and small cabins. Height: 11.375 inches (28.5 cm) to top of cook surface, 13 inches (33 cm) to top of sea rail.

  5. Sardine Stove Info & Specs

    Sardine stove. It has carried us through winter (we live aboard the boat). We're so glad we chose this model. It is built like a tank, and looks damn gorgeous. We have a dry toilet aboard, and in colder weather when the stove sees more use we re-use the wood ashes . as cover. In that way, the wood has yet another use aboard.

  6. Small, Efficient, Modern Wood Burning Stoves

    Mini wood stove designed to heat boats, cabins and RV's up to 40' long. Produces 6000 to 14000 BTU's! Measures only 11 x 12 x 10.5! Eco-friendly. Much safer than a diesel or propane heater. Durable! Constructed from laser cut steel plate 1/8 to 3/16 thick! Easy to install and easy to operate!

  7. Boats

    Most folks installing a wood stove in an boat are going to be limited on space. Therefor, building a wall mounted heat shield tends to make the most sense. This will allow you to reduce clearance requirements for the stove and single wall pipe down to only 6" from any part of the stove or pipe to nearby combustible materials protected by the ...

  8. Duckworks

    Homemade Wood Stove For a Small Boat. 6 inches wide by 6 inches high (excluding feet) by 8 inches deep. Out here on the 'Wet' Coast, specifically in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, keeping the cabin of your boat warm and toasty makes for a better boating experience. A wood stove is a great solution, but marine wood stoves are costly.

  9. Creative Cubic Mini Wood Stove Installation on sailboat ...

    Frozen Orchids won't keep you warm! One step closer to being ready for the cold was to install the tiniest marine wood stove we could find on our sailboat.

  10. Cubic Mini Wood Stove Sailboat Examples: Installs, Reviews, Tips

    Dwarf Tiny Wood Stove - 3, 4, and 5 kW versions made of thicker steel and with additional features. Pipsqueak Mini Wood Stove - a good option for those in the UK. Sardine Tiny Wood Stove - with a name like that it's got to be good for boats. Often your choice will ultimately come down to what's most accessible to you.

  11. Wood stove on a sailboat?

    Properly done, any combustion stove can be safely installed in a boat.I live aboard and heated with wood for 2 years. PO also heated with wood a couple years. The big issue for me is hauling and storing enough wood. Also, it seems it's either too hot or too cold in the boat.It took about 6 arm loads of wood per 24 hour day to heat in cold weather. 2 cords a month in really cold weather.

  12. DIY Sailing: Cubic Mini Cub wood stove aboard a small sailboat

    To prepare our sailboat Dawn Treader for the cold and damp of Patagonia, we installed a small wood burning stove made by Cubic Mini.Music by: Lemont. Find ...

  13. CB-1008 CUB Cubic Mini Wood Stove

    Mini wood stove designed to heat boats, cabins and RV's up to 40' long. Durable! Constructed from laser cut steel plate 1/8 to 3/16 thick! Produces 6000 to 14000 BTU's! ... The Cub Wood Stove is Cubic Mini's first wood burning stove. It's birth was inspired by one too many cold, damp nights in a boat. Our Cubic Mini creator built this stove ...

  14. Select the Best Marine Stove for Your Boat

    The price range for a new two- or three-burner electric marine stove and oven is $1,500 to $2,000; for one- and two-burner electric and induction cooktops, from the simple to the sublime, the price ranges from $100 to $900. Replacing your galley range will update the look of your interior and make meal prep more enjoyable.

  15. The Little Cod Boat Wood Stove

    The Little Cod Boat Wood Stove. By Steve | October 3, 2008. The season is turning, that's obvious. We're pinned down in Deer Harbor with a frontal system coming through… 30-40 knots tomorrow, a brief respite on Sunday, another blast on Monday. We parked here to rendezvous with Andrew of Navigator Stove Works and get the black-enameled ...

  16. SMALL STOVE REVIEW: Navigator Stove Works

    Navigator Stove works has been building quality (made in the USA) tiny cast iron wood stoves since 1997. They are specifically made for boats but have been used for many other applications like RV's, yurts and other small spaces. One thing I really like about these little stoves is they have a traditional look and … SMALL STOVE REVIEW: Navigator Stove Works - Sardine Read More »

  17. Can We DIY Install A Cubic Mini Wood Burning Stove

    So we went and installed a wood burning stove onto our 40yr old sailing boat that we live on. It's a brilliant little stove from a company called 'Cubic mini...

  18. Sardine Wood Stove Reviews 2024: "The Perfect Boat Companion"

    Sardine Wood Stove Review: A Tiny Stove For Boats And Other Marine Vessels. The Sardine Wood Stove is one of three wood-burning stoves created by Marine Stove. It's a 2 - 5 kW (7,500 - 18,000 BTU) tiny wood stove with dimensions of 12 x 12 x 11 inches (30 x 30 x 28 cm) and weighing only 35 lbs (16 kgs). The other two models that Marine ...

  19. Capybara Stoves

    Why Our Mini Stoves? 🔥 Heats Boats, Shed Cabins, and RV's up to 40 feet long. 📏 Measures only 16.5 x 12.5 x 12". 📐 Real wood stove technology, scaled down. 🌡️ 8500-18500 BTU. 🌎 Eco Friendly and Cheap to Operate. 💨 Uses Standard 3" Stovepipe. 🧹 Clean burning. 🦾 Heavy duty steel construction for ultra long life.

  20. The Little Cod Wood Stove Review

    The first 1,000 people to use this link will get a 1 month free trial of Skillshare: https://skl.sh/drakeparagon0322Have you ever imagined having a wood burn...

  21. Halibut Wood Burning Cookstove For Boats: Wood Burning And Coal

    The Halibut Cookstove is a solid-fuel marine stove designed for heating and cooking. It's made of heavy cast iron with a bronze sea rail. The stove has an oven, firebox, glass window in the door, and a shaker grate. It uses solid fuels like wood and coal, and can output 25-35,000 BTUs of heat. The Halibut is suitable for boats, small cabins ...

  22. Tiny Wood Stove

    Wood stoves designed for small spaces like tiny homes, RVs, buses, vans, and yurts. Complete chimney install kits and personal support for a safe installation. Personal Support. Free Shipping over $1,000. Tiny Living People. Buy Online.

  23. The KIMBERLY™ #1 Best Tiny Wood Stove For Longer Burn Times

    The Kimberly™ stove has earned a reputation as the best wood stove for a tiny house, the best RV wood stove, and the best marine wood stove, due to Kimberly's long burn times, clean chimney, and tight 6-inch side clearances. Our tiny wood stove has appeared on TV in Tiny House Nation, Treehouse Masters, and was selected to compete in the ...