Specifications
Solution 1.8 Installation and Operation Manual  9 
2.2  Zone Heating and How to Make it Work for You 
Your new Solution 1.8 wood stove is a space heater, which means it is intended to heat the area it 
is installed in, as well as spaces that connect to that area, although to a lower temperature. This is 
called zone heating and it is an increasingly popular way to heat homes or spaces within homes. 
Zone heating can be used to supplement another heating system by heating a particular space 
within a home, such as a basement family room or an addition that lacks another heat source. 
Houses of moderate size and relatively new construction can be heated with a properly sized and 
located wood stove. Whole house zone heating works best when the stove is located in the part of 
the house where the family spends most of its time. This is normally the main living area where the 
kitchen, dining and living rooms are located. By locating the stove in this area, you will get the 
maximum benefit of the heat it produces and will achieve the highest possible heating efficiency 
and comfort. The space where you spend most of your time will be warmest, while bedrooms and 
basement (if there is one) will stay cooler. In this way, you will burn less wood than with other forms 
of heating. 
Although the stove may be able to heat the main living areas of your house to an adequate 
temperature, we strongly recommend that you also have a conventional oil, gas or electric heating 
system to provide backup heating. 
Your success with zone heating will depend on several factors, including the correct sizing and 
location of the stove, the size, layout and age of your home and your climate zone. Three-season 
vacation homes can usually be heated with smaller stoves than houses that are heated all winter. 










