Stay Warm and Save Energy with a Magic Heat Blower

By admin

A magic heat blower is a unique and innovative device that uses a combination of magic and technology to generate and regulate heat. This device is designed to provide warmth and comfort in various settings such as homes, offices, and outdoor areas. The magic heat blower utilizes advanced wizardry and spells to control the temperature and distribute heat evenly. It is equipped with enchanted heating elements that produce a consistent and steady flow of warm air, creating a cozy ambiance wherever it is placed. One of the remarkable features of the magic heat blower is its ability to adapt to different environments. Whether it is used indoors or outdoors, this device effortlessly adjusts its temperature to suit the surroundings.



Magic Heat Wood Stove Flue Heat Reclaimer for Wood Stoves

The Magic Heat Reclaimer is a simple device with remarkable results. Reclaim the heat escaping up your chimney flue and heat your house faster and cheaper! This heat reclaimer is so efficient it easily paid for itself before the first winter was even over. In the video, the person was using over 4 cords of wood but after installing Magic Heat, now only uses less than 3 cords! He used to be unable to heat a few far away rooms in his house, but now he has to open the windows sometimes because it is too hot! The Magic Heat Reclaimer may be the best bang for the buck you have ever gotten out of a piece of equipment. If you are considering getting one of these heat saving units you need to keep reading because there are a few secrets and tips we want to share with you.

Y ou can see the unit in action and how effective it really is. The person in the video lives in Nova Scotia, Canada, and during the winter it is sometimes -20 C. His wood stove and magic heat unit are enough to heat his drafty 2000 square foot main floor on the coldest of days – but this would not be even remotely possible with just the wood stove alone!

See explanation in the video about the crimp on the bottom VS crimp on the top. The bottom does not leak.

This metal box is a heat exchanger. It captures and extracts the heat from your very hot flue gas before it escapes out the top of your chimney, never to return. It is easily installed between 12 and 24 inches above the top of your heating stove and models are available to fit a 6, 7, or 8 inch flue pipe on a wood, coal, oil, or gas stove/furnace.

The image you see above is the complete Magic Heat Reclaimer. Envision this metal box inserted directly into your existing single wall flue pipe . As the hot flue gas travels upwards through this box it heats ten horizontal stainless steel heat exchanging tubes that travel through the whole container. The ten holes in the image above are the front ends of these tubes…you can actually look through the box via these tubes. So, as the flue gas travels up it makes these pipes very hot, continues to travel upwards and back into your existing piping and eventually out the top of your chimney.

Once the flue gas has reaches 150 degrees Farenheit a thermostatically automated fan turns on at the rear of the unit. This fan forces room air through the ten pipes. By the time this air gets blown out the front of the unit it is unbelievably hot. This air can be so hot it can be unpleasant to hold your hand directly infront of the holes!

That’s it. The Magic Heat Reclaimer is, in essence, a beautifully simple contraption. It’s the most efficient heat exchanger we have ever seen for a household heating stove, bar none. This is the simple explanation but there is much more to learn.

Magic heat recovery addon

Browsing around today and found this interesting gizmo.
Recipe for creosote buildup or good idea?



Northern Tool - Magic Heat Reclaimer for Wood, Oil or Coal Stove - 6 in., Model# MH-6-R customer reviews - product reviews - read top consumer ratings

Last edited: Nov 24, 2012

ss~zoso~ss

ArboristSite Operative
Joined Sep 5, 2011 Messages 192 Reaction score 43 Location North East US

probably would give you a bunch more heat, but lowering your stack temps thus leading to 'theoretically' more creosote build up and a lousy draft

might make the stove a ##### to get started.

Ductape

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined Mar 3, 2007 Messages 8,809 Reaction score 19,950 Location Central New Hampshire Browsing around today and found this interesting gizmo.
Recipe for creasote buildup

Cooling the flue gasses can only increase creosote build-up

haveawoody

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined Sep 22, 2011 Messages 1,547 Reaction score 478 Location Ontario canada

That was my thought about lowering the stack temp and allowing creosote buildup.
After a very long read at the site i guess it only fires up when the stack is wasting heat, turns off when the stack is to low.

Might be an interesting addon for under $200.
Like a second blower but using only waste heat Hmmm.

Last edited: Nov 24, 2012

redprospector

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined Jan 22, 2005 Messages 5,107 Reaction score 961 Location Cloudcroft, New Mexico

That double elbow above the heat exchanger in the picture will do more for creasote build up than the heat exchanger.

Reactions: Mo. Jim

JBinKC

ArboristSite Operative
Joined Jul 12, 2006 Messages 166 Reaction score 8 Location MM89 Lake of the Ozarks

I would never attempt this on an EPA certified stove ( the stove looks like a Vogelzang defender which is EPA certified) which operate on lower flue temperatures. If you need more heat buy a bigger stove.

If you are using an EPA exempt appliance the risks are lower but yes your creosote potential rises.

MGoBlue

Those who stay will be champions
Joined Mar 9, 2011 Messages 1,358 Reaction score 2,094 Location Pa

My father used one of those all through my youth. It was on a Ben Franklin type open fireplace. It worked great! The only drawback was noise, they aren't quiet.
He never had a problem w/ creosote. The pull in the middle scrapes it from the tubes. Every so often you push/pull it a few times.

brenndatomu

Hey you woodchucks, quit chucking my wood!
Joined Feb 25, 2012 Messages 2,510 Reaction score 1,924 Location NE/Central Ohio

They are fine on an old inefficient stove with no baffles or any thing in it. I had one installed on one of those old "fire in a metal box" stoves, worked good as long as I was burning dry wood and not trying to burn low and slow. Try any of that, you'll get a face full of smoke every time you go to reload, due to plugged up flue.

I don't remember it being all that loud, course it wasn't in my living room either.

blades

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined Nov 19, 2008 Messages 4,019 Reaction score 3,012 Location SE WI Magic heat = The magic is when the house burns down.

allstihl

ArboristSite Guru
Joined Feb 9, 2006 Messages 563 Reaction score 554 Location waterville ny

they actualy do work bretty good on something like the old barrel stoves. however on a modern stove unless you clean the chimney allmost weekly ,a chimney fire is in your future.

trophyhunter

ArboristSite Guru
Joined Nov 7, 2012 Messages 600 Reaction score 221 Location Indiana

On a newer EPA stove, not if it was free. Recipe for disaster, I never thought they were well suited to any stove chimney. Stack temp is a key ingredient to keeping the chimney cleaner.

jjmetheny

New Member
Joined Nov 20, 2009 Messages 2 Reaction score 3 Location iowa

I have one in the house and one in the garage, about 8 years now, must be on borrowed time :frown: Clean the chimneys once a year, only a handful of junk from each. Englander 30 in the house and a Century 300007 in the garage both epa stoves.

Reactions: Sagetown

trophyhunter

ArboristSite Guru
Joined Nov 7, 2012 Messages 600 Reaction score 221 Location Indiana

Knew a guy that burned a Harmon stove for years with no issues at all, he just had to have one of those and put it in. Bout a month later his chimney caught fire. That was so hot it burst the seams on the inner insulated pipe walls when they took it out to inspect it.

I sure wouldn't want to put a homeowner's policy to the test with one of those added into the installation.

dozerdean

ArboristSite Lurker
Joined Nov 26, 2009 Messages 31 Reaction score 17 Location northwest mo.

My father used one of those all through my youth. It was on a Ben Franklin type open fireplace. It worked great! The only drawback was noise, they aren't quiet.
He never had a problem w/ creosote. The pull in the middle scrapes it from the tubes. Every so often you push/pull it a few times.


My dad & I had one on our stoves in the 80's. Had no problems w/creosote.Was able to keep house 72-75 deg. Our pipe was 8 in dia.

stihly dan

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined Mar 6, 2012 Messages 2,840 Reaction score 1,988 Location nh

I bought one last yr. Worked awesome. The inner t-stat keeps the flue warm. The fan only blows heat, just like the stove fans. The handle in the front pulls out and scrapes the tubes for better efficiency. I had no creosote at all last yr. I only burnt wood. I paid $179 from northern tool. I got my $$ worth in the extra heat last yr. Blew 130 deg heat. Keep in mind if your thermometer reads 400 deg on the out side of the pipe, the middle will be like 1000 deg. Only problem is if you lose power, you need to take it out.

Rsquared

ArboristSite Operative
Joined Feb 7, 2012 Messages 191 Reaction score 37 Location Birch Run Michigan

Friend of mine had been using one for the last 4 years in his shop. He had his insurance man come out in October to do an "insurance tune up". Insurance man said they would drop him as a client if he didn't remove it. It worked great, but I guess there must be a bigger risk for something catastrophic happening with these things than most people think. Or, it's just an insurance company's hang up.

c5rulz

Addicted to ArboristSite
Joined Nov 29, 2010 Messages 2,763 Reaction score 3,453 Location Wisconsin

When I had a stove that was not airtight and burned wood like a trashburner, (i.e. very high stack temps unless you closed the damper) it worked well. I would not consider it on an airtight stove.

Mine was thermostatically controlled and shut itself on and off.

Steve NW WI

Unwanted Riff Raff.
Joined Jan 10, 2009 Messages 7,880 Reaction score 3,792 Location Wisconsin

Had one back when I was a kid on an Ashley circulator stove, it added heat for sure to the house, just not sure what the effect was on the chimney as I didn't have to clean it.

Devils advocate here: Why would this be worse on an EPA stove, when they have already burned most of the particulates that cause the creosote in the first place vs an old smoker that's sending it up the flue?

Wood Doctor

Edwin
Joined Jan 10, 2008 Messages 12,471 Reaction score 9,013 Location Omaha, Nebraska Cooling the flue gasses can only increase creosote build-up

Agree for the most part, but a secondary combustion chamber on some stoves allows you to burn off the smoke at high heat first, before it reaches the flue.

Better alternative to the Magic Heat is to just place a fan or portable behind the stove if you have room. Not having room, leave the flue gases alone and control most of the fire intensity with the air intake vents.

Magic Heat is a waste of money in my book--a noisey, ugly beast and a bear to keep clean.

Whitespider

Lost in the 50s
Joined Nov 17, 2010 Messages 22,664 Reaction score 31,820 Location On the Cedar in Northeast Iowa

Devils advocate here: Why would this be worse on an EPA stove, when they have already burned most of the particulates that cause the creosote in the first place vs an old smoker that's sending it up the flue?

I was thinking the same thing.
At the same time I’m not so sure it would be as effective (for heat extraction) on an EPA certified stove. The flue pipe from the EPA firebox I’m using now runs noticeably cooler than the old smoke dragon did.

I also don’t believe cooling the flue gasses automatically means more creosote deposits… it would depend on the set-up. Creosote forms not because the flue gasses are cool, rather it’s because the chimney walls cool down causing condensation (of sorts) inside. My brick chimney runs up through the center of the house, it’s always warm, always a strong draft, and creosote has never been a problem… even when “smoldering” the fire in the old smoke dragon. The place I lived before this had the brick chimney running up the outside of the house, it was a bear to get drafting at times, it took forever to warm –up on cold days, and it would plug-up where the flue pipe connected to it. So yeah, if you’ve got 15-20 feet of chimney pipe running up the outside of your house, or a masonry chimney on an outside wall, then I’m thinking cooling the flue gasses would be a bad idea. But on the other hand, if your chimney pipe runs up through the house, with only a couple feet sticking out the roof, then cooling the flue gasses wouldn’t be so bad… and may not even be an issue at all.

I dump a ton of (relatively) cool air into my flue without creosote problems. I have 2-feet of six-inch vertical pipe coming off the firebox, which connects to an eight-inch “tee” and 2-feet of eight-inch horizontal pipe to the chimney. Also connected to that eight-inch “tee” is the four-inch pipe from the LP furnace… LP appliances use “hooded” exhaust so it’s continuously dumping cool air into the end of the horizontal section of pipe. And the three-inch exhaust from LP water heater also connects to the brick chimney, continuously dumping more cool air into the chimney. Like I said, running up the center of the house like that it’s always warm and always sucking… sucking hard. Creosote just ain’t an issue. Actually I think dumping that cool (actually room temperature warm) air from the furnace and water heater hoods into the flue allows it to free-flow better creating a higher velocity through the chimney. faster than it would be with just the wood burner connected.

Magic Heat MH-8R Bottom-Crimp Heat Reclaimer (8″)

The Magic Heat Bottom-Crimp Heat Reclaimer reclaims up to 30% of lost heat from your heating appliance and distributes it into your home using only .31 amp of power-roughly equivalent to a 40 watt light bulb! Magic Heat is designed for heating appliances with inside flue temperatures exceeding 350deg and surface temperatures of the single wall pipe below the Magic Heat exceeding 280deg . The bottom crimp design makes this unit ideal for wood burning heating applications by containing any creosote within the chimney. A toggle switch allows the 225 CFM. fan to operate in 2 modes-either run continuously or a preset thermostat automatically turns the blower fan on when the Magic Heat casing reaches 150deg and off at 120deg . Magic Heat must be installed between 12 in. and 24 in. from the appliance flue outlet using single wall connector pipe. Here’s how Magic Heat works: As hot flue gases travel from your heating appliance upward through the flue, they heat the transfer tubes in the inner case. Fresh room air enters through the back vents and is heated while traveling through the transfer tubes. The 225 CFM. fan pushes out the warmed air through the tubes and into your home, reclaiming up to 30,000 British Thermal Units (BTU) of lost heat. Flue gases are not restricted and continue up your chimney. This Magic Heat is for 8 in. pipe diameters for wood, oil/coal or natural gas burning heating appliances. It is manufactured in the USA.
Only UL-listed heat reclaimer on the market
Crimp-down configuration is designed for use with wood-burning heating applications
Easy to install
Variable BTU output: 8,000 min/30,000 max
Built-in soot scraper cleans tubes internally allowing for maximum heat transfer
Plugs into any standard 110V household outlet
Removable back for easy maintenance
Toggle switch allows 225cfm fan to operate in 2 modes—run continuously or thermostat control mode
Fits 8″ dia flue

MAGIC HEAT

MH-8R

MH-8R

28 lbs

14.25 x 10.63 x 18.25 Inches

Whether it is used indoors or outdoors, this device effortlessly adjusts its temperature to suit the surroundings. For instance, if placed in a chilly outdoor setting, the magic heat blower will automatically amplify its heat production to ensure maximum comfort. In addition to its heating capabilities, the magic heat blower also comes with a variety of enchantments and enhancements.

Magic heat blower

Many models are equipped with built-in air purifiers that cleanse the air of impurities, providing users with clean and fresh indoor environments. Some models even have spell-controlled timers, allowing users to set specific heating durations or patterns. The magic heat blower is not just a practical appliance, but also an aesthetic addition to any space. It is typically designed with sleek and modern aesthetics, blending seamlessly with different interior styles. Some models even feature customizable enchantments, allowing users to modify the appearance and functionality of their magic heat blowers. In terms of energy efficiency, the magic heat blower is designed to be environmentally friendly. It employs magical energy rather than relying solely on electricity, reducing energy consumption and helping to lower carbon emissions. In conclusion, the magic heat blower is an extraordinary device that combines magic and technology to provide efficient heating in various settings. With its enchanting features and adaptable nature, this device offers both warmth and comfort, making it a valuable addition to any space..

Reviews for "Unlock the Magic of Efficient Heating with a Heat Blower"

1. John - 1 star - The Magic heat blower was a complete waste of my money. It claims to be a powerful blower that can heat up a room quickly, but in reality, it barely blows any air at all. It took forever to heat up my small living room and even then, it wasn't warm enough. I would not recommend this product to anyone looking for an effective way to heat their space.
2. Emily - 2 stars - The Magic heat blower was not what I expected. It is advertised as a compact and portable device, but it is actually quite bulky and takes up a lot of space. The heat it produces is also not evenly distributed, leaving some areas of the room cold while others are uncomfortably hot. I found it to be quite noisy as well, making it difficult to relax or concentrate while it was in use. Overall, I was disappointed with this product and would not purchase it again.
3. Sarah - 1 star - The Magic heat blower did not live up to its promises. I bought it hoping it would provide a powerful and efficient heat source for my small office, but it fell short. The blower was incredibly loud and the heat it produced was not sufficient to warm the room adequately. Additionally, I found that it would often shut off unexpectedly, leaving me without any heat for long periods of time. I was highly dissatisfied with this product and would not recommend it to others.

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