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to  send “Termofor” — Siberian stoves, heaters, fireplaces
Home Stoves for Russian Banyas Shilka
Wood-burning

Economy
wood-burning hot stone stove

 


Smaller, yet better.


ussian banya is an wide notion.
It can contract just like it can be expanded. If you bathhouse is not a big kind, but a steam room hardly ten cubic meters in volume for just the two or three of you to fit in, what kind of stove should you opt for?

At this point you are overcome with questions and doubts. After all, it is not every day that you build a bathhouse. It’s the only life we have, so why not put aside a little more money for a big one, Kalina or whatever goes? After all, there can never be too much of a good thing.

Yet, much like with salting your soup, you must exercise moderation when it comes to heat in your bathhouse. Moderate heat does not necessarily mean little heat.

This stove has been designed with just your kind of bathhouse in mind. It is just the kind of stove it takes to heat up small steam rooms. A sensible solution that hits it right in the bull’s eye.

 


  • Installation is to some extent simplified thanks
    to the smoke stack traditionally arranged at the stove’s centre.

  • A deep and voluminous stone hearth heated up
    by the central heat exchanger generates excellent steam.

  • A built-in or suspended water tank, or two tanks simultaneously.

  • The built-in tank quickly heats up water to boiling point. The water level can be replenished by pouring water into a broad opening.

 

Ìîäåëü Shilka Shilka Á
Steam room volume, m3 6—10
Weight, kg 37 43
Depth, mm 730 830
Width, mm 415
Height, mm 690
Furnace volume, L 43
Stone hearth volume, L 15
Maximum log length, cm 40
Water piping 1/2", 3/4"
Smoke stack diameter, mm 115
Minimum smoke stack height, m 3