Do people still use Franklin stoves?
Yes. People still use Franklin stoves today, mainly in cabins, older homes, and rustic spaces where a traditional wood-burning fireplace stove is desired. For the Franklin 26G fireplace, usage is most common for supplemental heat and ambiance rather than as a primary whole-home heating system.
What “Franklin stove” usually means today
A Franklin stove can refer to an antique-style, freestanding wood stove design inspired by Benjamin Franklin’s original concept, or a modern reproduction with updated materials and airflow. In real homes, we typically see them used for:
- Supplemental zone heating (one room or a small area)
- Occasional or seasonal use (weekends, power outages, shoulder seasons)
- Ambiance and radiant warmth in living spaces
- Off-grid or low-tech heating setups
- Restoration projects where historical style matters
Practical expectations: heat, efficiency, and upkeep
Most Franklin-style stoves and fireplace stoves provide noticeable radiant heat, but they generally do not match the efficiency and clean-burning performance of many newer EPA-certified wood stoves.
| Feature | Franklin-style stove (typical) | Modern high-efficiency wood stove (typical) |
|---|---|---|
| Best use | Supplemental heat, ambiance | Primary or high-output heating |
| Efficiency | Moderate to low | Higher |
| Maintenance | More frequent cleaning | Still regular, often less soot buildup |
Safety and setup checks we recommend
Because a fireplace stove involves high heat, combustion air, and venting, safe installation and routine inspection matter as much as the stove itself.
- Verify the chimney/flue is the correct type and in good condition
- Confirm clearances to combustibles (walls, mantel, furniture)
- Use seasoned firewood to reduce smoke and creosote
- Keep a working smoke alarm and carbon monoxide alarm nearby
- Schedule regular chimney cleaning based on how often you burn
Why it matters
Knowing how Franklin stoves are commonly used helps you set the right expectations for comfort, fuel use, and maintenance. If you are maintaining a Franklin 26G fireplace, matching parts and safe venting practices are the keys to reliable operation.
For help identifying the exact model and the right replacement parts, use how to find your appliance model number (and what it means for parts).
Last updated: February 2026
Why wasn't the Franklin stove successful?
The original Franklin stove saw limited adoption because its early smoke-routing design depended on strong chimney draft; in many homes, a cool or weak draft let smoke spill into the room. It also required more precise construction and setup than a simple open fireplace.
What made the early design hard to live with
A stove that sends exhaust through longer internal passages can pull more heat from the smoke, but it also demands reliable airflow up the chimney.
- Cold chimney at startup increased smoke rollout risk
- Weak draft made the fire burn poorly and smoke more
- Narrower internal passages could clog with soot and ash
- Installation details (chimney height, flue size, clearances) mattered more
- More components meant more maintenance than an open hearth
How this relates to a Franklin 26G fireplace
Your Franklin 26G is a modern fireplace category product, not the historical Benjamin Franklin stove. If you are troubleshooting smoke smell, smoke in the room, or a lazy flame on a 26G unit, the most common causes are venting condition, combustion air supply, and home air pressure.
Quick checks for smoke and draft problems on a fireplace
- Make sure the flue/vent path is clear of soot, debris, or nests
- Confirm any damper opens fully and stays open
- Reduce negative pressure (turn off bath fans or range hood during startup)
- Verify combustion air openings are not blocked
- Use dry fuel and build a hot kindling fire to establish draft
Draft symptoms and what they usually mean
| What you notice | Common cause | Typical fix |
|---|---|---|
| Smoke at startup only | Cold flue | Pre-warm flue; start with kindling |
| Smoke whenever fans run | Negative house pressure | Limit exhaust; add makeup air |
| Lazy flame, soot buildup | Restricted venting or low air | Clear vent; improve air supply |
Why it matters
Poor draft increases smoke, soot, and creosote buildup; that reduces heating performance and raises the risk of venting problems. For safe DIY decision-making, follow are diy appliance repairs safe.
Last updated: February 2026
How do I find the model number on my 26G?
For a Franklin fireplace, the model number is typically printed on the rating plate (data tag) attached to the firebox or inside an access area; once you find it, match it exactly to ensure you get the correct diagrams and replacement parts for model 26G.
Where to look on a Franklin fireplace
Check these common rating-plate locations first:
- Inside the lower louvered panel or bottom grille (often where controls are accessed)
- Along the side of the firebox opening, just inside the front frame
- Behind the screen or glass front (if your unit has one), near the lower edge
- On the back of the unit (more common on inserts or freestanding fireplace heaters)
- Near the gas control valve area or electrical junction box cover (if equipped)
What the label looks like and what to copy
The rating plate usually includes several identifiers. Write them down exactly as shown:
- Model number (for example, 26G)
- Serial number
- Brand name (Franklin)
- Fuel type and input ratings (BTU) if listed
- Electrical ratings (volts/amps) if the unit has a blower or ignition system
Quick checklist to avoid ordering the wrong parts
Use this checklist before you shop:
- Match every character in the model number (letters, numbers, dashes)
- If there is a revision or suffix, include it
- Use the serial number when two versions share the same model family
- Compare your unit to the diagrams (louvers, controls, blower style)
Model number examples (what to enter)
| What you see on the tag | What to search/order by |
|---|---|
| 26G | 26G |
| 26G-1 (example) | 26G-1 |
| 26G (plus a serial number) | 26G (keep serial for reference) |
Why it matters
Fireplaces often have multiple production runs with different burners, blowers, switches, and wiring. Using the exact model number helps us match the correct parts breakdown and prevents fit and safety issues.
If the tag is missing or unreadable, use our guide: [how to find your appliance model number (and what it means for parts)].
Last updated: March 2026





