Home >

WoodMaster AFS 1100 Pellet Boiler/Furnace - Discontinued
WoodMaster AFS 1100 Pellet Boiler Furnace


 


Availability: Currently Unavailable
Product Code: AFS1100
Discontinued

Product Description Technical Specs Extended Information and Videos
 
THIS PRODUCT HAS BEEN DISCONTINUED, THIS PAGE IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY

The WoodMaster AFS 1100 furnace uses wood pellets, corn, small grains and other materials to heat multiple buildings, including a home, garage or workshop, pool, spa, greenhouse or commercial structure.

Click here for Single Line PEX Pipe

Click here for Dual Line PEX Pipe

Features
  • No fuels enter the house to limit smoke, soot, fire hazards and the risk of dangerous carbon monoxide buildup
  • 100% sawdust wood pellets
  • Sawdust compressed and formed into 1/4-inch diameter cylinders and packaged in 40 lb. bags.
  • Heat transfer design draws more heat from burning a comparable amount of corn, small grains or wood pellets than competitive furnaces
  • Digital Electronic Temperature Control (ETC) is one center for operating temperature settings, blower, reset, water level indicator and nightlight
  • Easy-to-read display

Installation

Each WoodMaster Pellet furnace is installed outdoors, from 25–400 feet from the home or structure(s) that it will heat. A core fire box is surrounded by a water jacket. The fire warms water to its optimal heating temperature, maintained by automatic controls. The warm water moves through insulated underground piping into the home's heat exchangers and heating system. Inside, you control the temperature with your thermostat.

Corn & grain drying

The WoodMaster Pellet’s high Btu output can save farmers thousands of dollars by using a Desert Air dryer to dry down their own corn and grain in the fall

Bin setup

Fuel storage bin options hold 60 to 340 bushels, so owners can re-fuel the furnace at their convenience, with bin capacity ranging from one month to an entire heating season’s supply

Maintenance

Outdoor pellet furnace maintenance tips:

  • Manage combustion by keep a continuous supply of oxygen and using the proper amount and type of fuels
  • Properly build fires:
    • Never use flammable liquids
    • Warm the flue
  • Check the auger and hopper for accumulated materials (fines). The fuel in the hopper and auger tube should be run out occasionally to prevent sawdust from blocking it.
  • Inspect chimney flue, stovepipe every month
    • Look for cracked liners, missing parts, bird nests or other hazards
  • Clean joints, chimney connectors and flues as necessary
  • If you do have a chimney fire, inspect and repair weakened parts before restarting furnace
  • Properly, regularly dispose of ashes

Installation

Each WoodMaster Pellet furnace is installed outdoors, from 25–400 feet from the home or structure(s) that it will heat. A core fire box is surrounded by a water jacket. The fire warms water to its optimal heating temperature, maintained by automatic controls. The warm water moves through insulated underground piping into the home's heat exchangers and heating system. Inside, you control the temperature with your thermostat.

Corn & grain drying

The WoodMaster Pellet’s high Btu output can save farmers thousands of dollars by using a Desert Air dryer to dry down their own corn and grain in the fall

Bin setup

Fuel storage bin options hold 60 to 340 bushels, so owners can re-fuel the furnace at their convenience, with bin capacity ranging from one month to an entire heating season’s supply
- See more at: http://www.woodmaster.com/pelletfurnaces_afs1100.php#sthash.66IPKyky.dpuf

Average Customer Review: Average Customer Review: 4 of 5 4 of 5 Total Reviews: 1 Write a review.

  0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
 
4 of 5 Running one of these for quite awhile March 14, 2015
Reviewer: John Whitehead from Casnovia, MI  
I've been running an AFS 1100 for close to ten years now.  I heat about 2800 square feet plus domestic hot water.  I've burned corn, pellets, and pellet/cherrypit combination. It's the only outdoor boiler I've ever had so I don't really have anything to compare it to.  While I've been happy with it, it's not for the person who expects it to run in a "set it and forget it" mode.  It does take some fussing from a maintenance standpoint.   If anyone has one of these and wants any suggestions, with the time I've had this I've become pretty knowledgeable. [email protected]

Was this review helpful to you?