In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

Shield for my stove for safety

Discussion in 'Modern EPA Stoves and Fireplaces' started by cezar, Dec 3, 2025 at 3:33 PM.

  1. cezar

    cezar

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    My kid decided to test out the glass on our stove last night. Fortunately it was near a reload and the glass he touched with both hands was only 260F compared to the 800F or so I have measured it at when it's at full chooch.

    He'll be fine thankfully. And I am confident he'll never test it again. But I'm concerned about the possibility of him (or anyone!) tripping and faceplanting into the glass. The stove body itself never really gets beyond 300F or so, but 800F on the glass seems like lifelong injury territory.

    I think my Clydesdale is one of the largest glass fronts on the market and there is a lot of real estate for that glass that gets absolutely ripping hot. Any thoughts on things I can do to prevent the possibility of someone accidentally tripping and making contact? My living room is on the small side so there will always be kids and adults and dogs walking nearby all winter long.

    I can get one of those 3-panel guards and that will probably work but it's a gigantic eyesore and also inconvenient. Wondering what others have done in this situation.
     
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  2. Burnin Since 1991

    Burnin Since 1991

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    [​IMG]I use the fireplace screen. My son has a pellet stove insert and he uses the kiddie fences? These are similar only not made out of plastic

    Amazon.com : Baby Playards
     
    Last edited: Dec 3, 2025 at 7:27 PM
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  3. cezar

    cezar

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    I'm _specifically_ worried about the 800F glass face. I am not ideally looking to babyproof the stove body itself, just the glass alone due to the insane temperatures it reaches. My IR gun goes to 850 and I've had it do "--" a couple times. It probably gets into the Leidenfrost effect at those temps and you would just bounce off it, but there is obviously some range where it's truly dangerous for anyone that would trip into it.

    I'm surprised there isn't some sort of double-glazing on these things that ties into the blower to channel air up and out...
     
  4. Burnin Since 1991

    Burnin Since 1991

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    Sorry, I don't know of anything like that. Interested to see if you come up with something
     
  5. wildwest

    wildwest Moderator

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    I didn't risk it, previous home had a custom wood enclosure with door. Here, only 2 woodstoves for heat, both of them got plastic panels around them. Since then we used them camping to contain the two dogs and more recently for blocking chickens lol.

    Only issue we had, but smelled it quickly, was when she tossing her security blanket in the air and it landed on a stove. Looked like a burn from a clothes iron forgot on shirt lol.
     
    Last edited: Dec 3, 2025 at 6:40 PM
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  6. wildwest

    wildwest Moderator

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  7. MikeInMa

    MikeInMa

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    We have a tri-fold screen the gets setup when kids or animals are visiting. It folds up and is stored behind the woodstovevwhen not needed.

    Even with space a consideration, why protect just the glass? Protect the entire stove, imo.