Hark Eco-Plus
Reduces the firewood consumption and protects the environment!

The combined stove is a synthesis of warm air and basic tiled stove. The benefits of both systems are combined in one device. As with a warm-air tiled stove, there is a heating insert in the interior of the tiled covering, which heats the air in the cavity between the heating insert and tile covering and causes it to circulate (convection principle). The heated air flows directly through the grids into the living area and heats it very quickly. In order to ensure long-lasting and pleasant radiated heat, the flue gases are not guided through metallic re-heat registers, as in a hot-air stove, but through ceramic hot gas channels.
The ceramic hot gas channels are the "heat reservoir" of the combined stove. Depending on the finish of the bricked channels (length), the stored heat is passed on in the course of time. The hot gas channels are slowly "charged" with the heat of the flue gases. The specific ceramic material stores this heat and passes it to the environment in doses during a long period of time. This radiated heat generates a "feel-good" heat, which is sensed as being extremely pleasant by people, similar to the sun's rays.
As a reason of the warm air, which is quickly available, the combined stove is very well suited for short-term heating during transitional periods and as a result of the outstanding storage properties also as a long-term heating with a high degree of radiated heat.
A further benefit of the combined stove is the good possibility of combination with hot-air shafts and additional grids. Via these additional hot-air shafts and grids, a number of rooms, which can be either neighbouring or in the storey above the room being heated, can also be heated comfortably.
