You say Great room so I am guessing it has a high ceiling. Most of your heat is at the ceiling, goes straight up from the stove even with the fan it still ends up there. If you can install a cold air return from the furnace at the ceiling level and set the furnace fan to run, it will do a world of good! I would do one that can be turned open in winter and closed in summer. I have a 2000 sqaure ft house with the older part built in 1880s. I have the 10 ft ceilings and transoms above the doors. There is a natural warm air draft that flows from the stove room to the other parts of the house with the cold air going across the floor back towards the stove room. The old part of the house stays toasty warm but the newer part in the back of the house with 8 ft ceilings suffers. I am freezing right now because my computer is in the new part. The house is narrow and long with the stove up in the older part. The furnace fan helps a lot. But I need to get my cold air return up near the ceiling so it can circulate the hotter air up at the ceiling level. The furnace fan running helps stir up the air so the floor isn"t as cold. If you light a cigarette or an inscence stick or something that smoulders and hold it up and watch the smoke, it will show you where the air is moving so you can work with it. Hold it up high and then in the same area hold it low and watch where the air goes. If you are going to just circulate the air in that room set the fan on the floor tipped back so it blows up and not pointed at the stove and run it on high, it will stir up the air enough to bring the warm back down.
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Today's Featured Article - Seeing an Old Friend - by Joe Evans. Dad had a concrete contracting business starting in 1960. One of his first pieces of equipment was a Ferguson TO-35 with a Davis loader. Dad replaced the TO-35 with a MF 202 Workbull, essentially an industrialized Ferguson 35 I am told. Dad bought the 202 new in 1962, and I recall quite clearly going to the dealer with him to sign for it.
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