Idahonative
Addicted to ArboristSite
lol! Got a heap of them indeed - nine. Oldest is getting married in a couple weeks, and the youngest is still spitting up. I might be interested in trading off one of them - he's a mix between Curious George and Dennis the Menace.
My kids are home-educated. They will rule the nation before long.
I do have a serious question for you though - I'm torn between the King and the Princess. Here's my set-up:
big old drafty victorian house with no insulation.
About 950 sq. ft. on each floor, plus a finished attic (plus basement as well, but that's of no concern here).
Stove is not central, but in one corner of the house. Rooms are quite open (8' openings between rooms) with 9' ceilings. Air flow is limited, but could be helped with fans.
My main desire is long burn times - I want to be able to get the stove going in the morning, then damp it down and leave it so the family doesn't have to mess with it all day until I get home. I don't need 40 hours, but I would like a very consistent 10 hours. I burn mostly seasoned hardwood, oak as much as possible. Sounds like the Princess would work, but I'd hate to need something larger and not have it.
Current chimney is 6", but I'm willing to replace that if it's determined I need the King, which means there's at least $1,000 price difference between the two, and with 9 hungry kids and a wedding to pay for, that's a lot of bucks for me to swing, so I don't want to do that for 'just-in-case' reasoning.
So with all that info, what is your recommendation? (Yeah, I know - a King on each floor with TWO new chimneys! )
Unc, I'm no wood stove expert so take my advice for what it is. We have a King for our small (1250 sf) home. Do we wish we had bought the Princess instead? Absolutely not and I will tell you why. We don't have the luxury of burning hardwood. If we did, we probably would have went with the Princess. Most of what we burn is pine so for us, being on a 24 hr. load schedule would be difficult on cold days with any other stove including the Princess. After 24 hrs. of heat from the King we simply open it up, reload, do a burnoff for about 15-20 minutes, set the auto damper, and forget about it for another 24 hrs. We had two really cold snaps last winter and not once did the King run out of fuel during the 24 hr. cycles running pine.
Many people have questioned why we put such a large stove in our tiny house. Even our sales lady tried to talk us into the Princess. She told us the King would "run you out of the house". Which really just proves that even she doesn't fully understand how these stoves work. The combination of the auto damper and the cat allows for some serious "turn down" capability. Turn it down and it will smolder (creating a lot of smoke) which the cat gladly eats up and spits out as heat into the home.
Knowing what I know about your situation, I don't think it's a question of the King or the Princess. I think it is a question of where are you going to put your two Kings.
BTW: We don't "build" fires. We light the fire at the beginning of the season and don't light another until spring (unless we have to shutdown for ash dump). There are always a healthy heap of coals for firing up the reload.