Von Gruff makes a good point with the heat treating. I try to tell people to design their forge based on what they want to do with it. I certainly wouldn't want to use a long 3 burner forge to forge a 4" hunter. But for heat treating, longer forges are more ideal. I have a heat treat oven so I typically don't use my forge for heat treating.
I am no expert but I do love forging. What I tell people is to think more forges instead of more versatile forges. Basically, you can have 2 or 3 forges that are good at a specific application. Propane is expensive and I try to be as efficient as I can with the process that I'm doing. This is one application where bigger is not always better. You don't want to be heating up a huge chamber to forge a 4" hunter, or at least... I don't want to.
I'm not saying you need to buy 3 forges, but just know what you want to do with this one. Since it's your first one, you may want to make it more versatile. In my opinion, the horizontal forges are more versatile because you typically get a longer heat which is nice for heat treating. I'm not crazy about forging knives in it because it's hard not to heat up the whole thing. So I use a small vertical for that. But I would say that most bladesmiths use a horizontal so it's certainly doable and is what I did for years.