February 2, 2013
Gas logs are a convenient option to wood-burning fireplaces
Chip Ellis
Good gas log units range in price from $800 to $1,500.
Chip Ellis
Emily and Steve Reynolds, owners of Fireside and Patio Shop in Cross Lanes, show a Heat & Glo Series 8000 fireplace. The direct vent fireplace can be placed on an exterior or interior wall.
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- I have always loved a wood-burning fireplace. The smoky aroma, the warm glow of the flames, the heat on my body as I sit near the hearth. And yet I've put on only two or three fires so far this winter.

True, it's been fairly warm this season, but the real reason is that my fires take work. I have to carry logs in from the outside, arrange them just so in the grate, using twigs, rolled up newspapers and small fire starters to get, if I'm lucky, a blaze started.

Then it's a constant vigil to keep the fire going, with more treks outside to get logs, then staying up while the blaze burns down so I won't go to bed worrying about setting the house on fire.

So I've given some thought to converting to a fireplace with gas logs. I spent Christmas and New Year's in homes that had them. It was nice. Push a button and flames appear, taking the chill out of the room. Too hot? Ready for bed? Push the button and the fire's out.

I didn't ask my hosts about what troubled me (the gas bill). Instead, I decided to look into fireplace options and to consult the experts. That would be Steve and Emily Reynolds, who own Fireside and Patio Shop in Cross Lanes.

"We both have gotten our Ph.D.s in the wood burning industry," Steve Reynolds joked about all they've learned in their 29 years in business.

When they bought the business in 1984, wood-burning stoves were hot sellers. Gas was perceived to be costly, and wood was abundant and cheap.

"Now wood is out and gas is in," said Reynolds, pointing out that wood isn't as available and gas prices have come down.

"If you compare the best gas and wood stoves, gas is one-third the cost of wood for the usable Btu coming into the house," he said.

He explained in detail my options if I want to convert to gas. But first I have to get a gas line to my fireplace.

Fireside and Patio will do that job too, and Reynolds said it usually isn't difficult if the house already uses gas to run the furnace or other heating appliance. If not, a line is installed from the street to the house. The cost varies from $800 to $1,200 but may run higher depending on the terrain.

"Many of the subdivisions around here are all-electric. There was a moratorium on natural gas usage in the 1960s," Reynolds said.

In those cases, a tank for propane or natural gas can be set on the outside of the house and an opening drilled to connect a line to the fireplace.

The best flames

Once I have gas to my fireplace, I could buy a good set of vented gas logs for $800 to $1,500. They have the prettiest flames, Reynolds said, pointing out how the flames wrap around the logs.

However, if installed in wood-burning fireplace, the gas logs don't give out heat much beyond the hearth. The gas being consumed takes warm air from the house and up the chimney. My gas bill would definitely go up, Reynolds said.

But maybe not by that much. At residential rates, the average set of gas logs -- about 30,000 Btu -- would cost 25 cents an hour, according to Larry Meador, manager of communications for Mountaineer Gas. That amounts to $2.50 over a 10-hour period, he pointed out.

Best gas option

"Heat & Glo, which was developed in the late '60s, is the best method of using gas," Reynolds said.

For an existing fireplace like mine, a metal or firebrick firebox would be inserted into the fireplace, and the opening would be closed off with glass doors. An insulated, divided pipe would carry air from the outside for combustion and the gases would be exhausted back outside through the pipe.

I am not sure I like the idea of watching a fire burn behind a glass wall. And now, Reynolds said, there must be a screen over the glass because the glass gets so hot.

With Heat & Glo-style products, Reynolds said my gas bill shouldn't change and may even reduce it. He explained that the heat radiated through the glass spreads in ripples throughout the house. My living room would probably be snug at 75 degrees, and override the nearby thermostat set at 70 degrees.

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