DXV42 Timberfire Gas Fireplace
Overview
The large DXV42 direct vent gas fireplace is designed for family rooms, room additions, and any large room where family and friends gather. Its slim 15½" deep firebox saves valuable floor space and is ideal for installations in bookshelves, entertainment centers and cabinetry walls. Offers infinite flame/heat adjustment from 40,000 to 27,000 BTUH.
Quick Specs
- BTUs: Up to 38,000 Input
Natural Gas
| BTU | 27,000 - 40,000 Input |
|---|---|
| Width | 40 in. |
| Height | 33 in. |
| Depth | 15-3/4 in. |
| Weight | 180 lbs. |
Liquid Propane
| BTU | 22,000 - 38,000 Input |
|---|---|
| Width | 40 in. |
| Height | 33 in. |
| Depth | 15-3/4 in. |
| Weight | 180 lbs. |
Hearth Blog Posts
Idaho Fireplace Permit & Code Guide: What's Required Where
Adding a fireplace or wood stove in Idaho? What's required depends on where you live and what you install. This guide covers gas vs. solid-fuel permits, EPA certification, clearances, chimney code, and Idaho's air-quality rules — by jurisdiction.
Fireplace Insert vs. New Fireplace: Which Makes Sense for Your Home
If you want a better fireplace, you have two fundamentally different paths: drop an insert into an existing fireplace, or install a brand-new unit. They sound similar, but they solve different problems, cost different amounts, and suit different homes — and the right choice usually comes down to one question: do you already have a usable fireplace opening? This guide breaks down both options across cost, efficiency, placement, and installation, with clear "choose this if" guidance. You'll learn why both crush an open masonry hearth on efficiency (10–20% vs. 70–90%), when an insert is the smart, cost-effective upgrade, and when a new built-in fireplace's placement freedom is worth the extra investment.
How to Buy a Fireplace in Idaho: Gas vs. Wood vs. Pellet
Before you can enjoy a fireplace, you have to make the first big decision: gas, wood, or pellet? Each fuel type has real strengths and real trade-offs, and the right choice depends on how you'll use it, what heat you want, how much maintenance you'll do, and what fuel is available where you live. This Idaho buyer's guide compares all three side by side — efficiency, upfront and fuel costs, heat output, power-outage performance, and maintenance — then walks through Idaho-specific factors like climate, burn regulations, and fuel availability. Includes a clear decision framework and the brands to look for: Kozy Heat, Heatilator, Heat & Glo, Valor, and Stûv.




