A fireplace heats a room by radiation. That radiation is the direct transfer of energy by electromagnetic waves.
form_title= Family Room Design form_header= Create a family room that is functional and stylish. What is the square footage of your family room? Do you want to install a fireplace?*= () Yes () No What is the main purpose of the room?*= _ [50] What is your budget for a remodel?*= _ [50]
Fireplace, family-room, floor, fixtures (like light fixtures)
form_title= Corner Fireplace form_header= Relax with a corner fireplace. Are you repairing an existing fireplace?*= () Yes () No Do you want a gas fireplace?*= () Yes () No What type of backsplash would you like?*= _ [50]
Fireplace is a noun.
In Scotland and elsewhere an inglenook is a alcove beside a fireplace.
Check and see if your fireplace has heat vents on the sides or above the firebox, and that they are open.
The function that a fireplace fan serves is to distribute heat throughout the room that the fireplace is in. A fireplace fan is ideal because it's probably not safe to sit too close to a fireplace.
Fireplaces have mostly radiant heat- infrared light. All light travels in a straight line- that whey the people in front feel the heat.
a vertical metal sheet that goes behind the fire to reflect heat back into the room.
It is like a metal box with a chimney flue. Its big advantage is compared to a fireplace. In a fireplace, a huge fraction of the heat goes up the chimney and you only get heat if you stand in front of it. The Franklin stove can be in the center of the room and warm the room in all directions.
You ARE going to lose heat up the chimney. Couple of things you can do to keep SOME of it in the room. Got a set of doors for the fireplace? They need to be open while burning, but can be closed as fire goes out, keep from sucking warm air out of the room. There are heat exchangers that are metal tubes with a fan. Tubes heated by the fire, fan pushes air thru the tubes, out into the room. The "Heatilator" style fireplaces have a heat exchanger built in to the fireplace. The heat exchangers are not cheap, and are still not as efficient as a wood stove.
It's most likely a woodburning/vented fireplace, by design the combustion air used to burn gas logs comes directly from the room, and all the fumes/hot air go up the chimney. The fireplace actually pulls outside air into the home to replace the air lost up the chimney. All the heat is radient, so if nothing is there the feel the heat, it is lost.
Fireplaces are generally pretty bad at heating. A set of doors for the fireplace can help. A heat exchange grate with a blower can get more warm air out into the room. The best solution is also the most expensive- a properly installed fireplace insert. This is basically a wood stove that fits into the fireplace.
Well is the question the total amount of heat, or total USEFUL heat? In general, a wood fire burns a bit hotter than gas- hence the wood fired pizza ovens. Hoever, gas fireplaces usually have a heat exchanger that draws in room air, warms it, and returns it to the room. It has less air going up the chimney than a wood fireplace (a major point of heat loss) The chimney of a wood fireplace may be more massive brick, which will hold heat after the fire burns out.
There are some glass doors for a fireplace, but you must make sure that the glass can withstand the heat of the fire. The glass door will prevent some heat from escaping, but not all. The glass door will not aid in keeping a room warm.
Poe was sometimes forced to use his own furniture in the fireplace in his room.burn his funiture
The primary purpose of a fireback, a metal plate attached to the back of a fireplace, is to hold heat from the fire and reflect the heat back into the room. A secondary purpose of the fireback is to protect the back wall of the fireplace from damage due to repeated exposure to fire.