You guys can probably imagine how exited I am to finally be starting this thread!
Who has any tips and tricks for loading their Englander 30?
I remember reading somewhere about the air control on this stove that the last couple inches of travel don't make any adjustment. From the fully open position, how much travel is actually making adjustment to the air?
What are preferred arrangements for wood in the stove when getting the fire going? I noticed that kindling burns pretty well if it's put in at odd angles to each other, sort of randomly.
Anyone have any particular arrangements they like for non-overnigt burns?
Even being a total newbie with this stove, I've read and learned a lot, so I'm not totally starting from scratch here. We lit the first fire around 7:00 Saturday evening. Getting the stove started was a little tricky, but once we split down some wood into smaller kindling, it took off OK.
At about 10:00 Saturday night, I put in three more splits, since I wasn't quite ready to go to bed. I'm used to the burning my WMC42 fireplace, and three splits wouldn't have bought me much time, maybe an hour or so at best. At 2:00am, I couldn't stay awake any more and it was 85 degrees in the living room. The fire was burning down, but still burning brightly towards the back of the stove. I woke up Sunday morning to a few coals in the back of the stove and the room at 69 degrees (usually the t-stat has been at 64), and the stove still warm. I couldn't believe it. I hadn't even packed it full for an overnight burn and the house was still warm. The furnace hasn't kicked on since Saturday night at just after 7:00!!
-SF
Who has any tips and tricks for loading their Englander 30?
I remember reading somewhere about the air control on this stove that the last couple inches of travel don't make any adjustment. From the fully open position, how much travel is actually making adjustment to the air?
What are preferred arrangements for wood in the stove when getting the fire going? I noticed that kindling burns pretty well if it's put in at odd angles to each other, sort of randomly.
Anyone have any particular arrangements they like for non-overnigt burns?
Even being a total newbie with this stove, I've read and learned a lot, so I'm not totally starting from scratch here. We lit the first fire around 7:00 Saturday evening. Getting the stove started was a little tricky, but once we split down some wood into smaller kindling, it took off OK.
At about 10:00 Saturday night, I put in three more splits, since I wasn't quite ready to go to bed. I'm used to the burning my WMC42 fireplace, and three splits wouldn't have bought me much time, maybe an hour or so at best. At 2:00am, I couldn't stay awake any more and it was 85 degrees in the living room. The fire was burning down, but still burning brightly towards the back of the stove. I woke up Sunday morning to a few coals in the back of the stove and the room at 69 degrees (usually the t-stat has been at 64), and the stove still warm. I couldn't believe it. I hadn't even packed it full for an overnight burn and the house was still warm. The furnace hasn't kicked on since Saturday night at just after 7:00!!
-SF