I am south of Tillsonburg
I will try to find a better website with more info.
All I know is that they are Amish built locally. And I have two friends with the Cunningham and both are pleased with the performance of the stove as well as the price.
Can't seem to find any US sellers of these, and the price is on the high end of what I'd like to spend, before I even get it here. Kind of a neat looking stove though. Would like to have one of those spiffy wood cookstoves one day when I build my retirement house. That's a looong ways off yet though.
Lot of advantages
Whatever stove or manufacturer you decide upon, get one that will take 24 inch wood.
It will save you a lot of processing time when putting up your yearly supply.
No need to worry about pieces being too long and not finding out until you try to shove them in and can't close the stove door in the middle of the night. If the chunk / log fits on a standard 2 foot stroke splitter it will go in the stove.
When loading for a long burn, ie overnight, three 24 inch pieces is the equivalent of four 18 inch pieces. (assuming same size splits)
My experience, take it for what you will.
Take Care
I've been cutting wood to 24" for years, you don't have to tell me the advantages, but many stoves out there won't take wood that long. If I find one I like that takes wood that long, so much the better, but if not, I'm not worried about it, if I buy a stove made to take 20", I'll start cutting 18-20" wood.
Plus, cutting is the fun part - shorter wood = more saw time!
LOPI.....The Liberty model is amazing
The Jotul Firelight F600CB is one that takes 24 inch wood.
Price, price, and price. If I find a nice used one, they'd all be welcome here, but they're not enough better in my eyes than the "bargain basement" models I'm leaning toward to justify their extra cost. Remember that this stove is going down in the man zone at the bottom of the stairs where things like chain grinders, shotshell reloaders, and other cool stuff hang out, not in the middle of the living room.
If I lived in Wisconsin and wanted a high end furnace, I would get a Royall. Hands down. If I was going to replace my Heatmor, I would buy a Royall indoor boiler. With the logistics, they are made in Reedsburg, WI. That is what I'd do.
Not interested in a furnace, for various reasons, not the least of which is that after my pole shed goes up in a year or three, I'll be looking hard at an OWB for the house and shed both, and then the stove will be backup heat. When that time comes, Royall will be on the list of boilers to look at.
There's no need to burn wood at 22-24" length to get a long overnight burn. Our furnace accepts 22" I think, and we cut at 16-18" length. When looking at EPA stoves, something in the 3+ cuft firebox will burn nice and long. Here recently our local home depot had the nc30 for 675.00, it was a steal at that price. Dealing with our furnace and it's quality, I wouldn't hesitate on a Drolet either. Nothing wrong with some box store stoves. If its heat your looking for, they will get the job done on a budget without all the fancy jewelry and outrageous prices.
That's what I was thinking. Thanks for reminding me that I missed out on that deal last spring, I remember seeing the "fire sale" post, and should have jumped on it then.
Take a look a Pacific Energy if that is available in your area..
Strong Performer..
See above. Price. I did have a good look at the Super 27, as well as the Summit, just couldn't see that they were that much better stoves. Like I said though, a nice used one isn't ruled out, if I can come by one before I break down and buy new.