Hi jimbob,
Yep, the secondary burn conversion on that old 1/4 inch plate steel 12 cubic foot
smoking dragon was all i could have hoped for. Kick ass with butt to spair
when she is going good you can't bear to be within 6 feet of her for too long!
Thats why I use a 24 inch box fan on high for a blower. Then you can stay near the stove if you dont mind sweating a lot.
It was easier to do because the stove already had a domestic hot water pipe strung just under the stove top which was the reason that I bought the stove for originally. But much to my suprise, after hooking up the stove, the domestic hot water coil leaked water all over my fire & extinguished my stove. I continued to burn the stove as a hot air stove while i steamed,more that the stove did, over getting ripped off with a leaky domestic hot water coil.
Then I said to myself,if I cant have a domestic hot water coil,why dont i convert the leaky hot water coil to secondary burn instead. And so i did.
On the initial attempt, ,it worked but I could not get secondary burn when I wanted to, but rather only when the stove felt like it.
So, I knew that I had partial sucess & was barking up the right tree, so i decided
to sit down & think about it for a couple of days while I kept running the stove to learn its new ways.
Finally, I took a ride down to home depot with a led flashlight in my pocket & an eye out for a englander 50-30clp stove. It took me all of two minutes with my head up inside that stove to figure out that I needed to drill one size larger holes in my secondary
air pipe & space the holes two inches apart instead of 6 inches apart.
So, when i got back home ,I let the stove start to cool down & shoveled all the burnt furnature ashes out of the stove & then I gave it a thourough vacumming.
I go out every sunday & collect all the perfectly good furnature that my stupid neighbors throw away for dump pick up & i stick it all in the back of my honda civic hatchback & break it up for free fire wood. wont every see me paying $275.oo a cord for wet wood like many Ct residents do. (Wet wood is the only kind that Ct has , because we only have 2 flavors of weather here, either rain or snow, depending on temp) oH , we get 1 or 2 days a week of partly cloudy, but thats about it as far as that red ball in the sky goes.
Next day I crawled inside the stove with an electric drill & a worklight on my chest, & spent 3 hours drilling more secondary air holes, working laying flat on my back
with the pipes I was drilling overhead. i ended up dulling around 12 --1/8 inch drill bits
getting 2 or 3 holes out of each bit before it dulled out.
I used those 2 inch long 1/8th bits that have tips on each end ,so when 1 gets dull,you can just reverse the bit in the chuck 7 have a second sharp bit to ruin.
The come in a packet of 30 for $12.oo from
www.harborfrieght.com
As to how it works now, it heats my whole house 2,700 sqft up to 79 deg F on 1/2 of a load of wood for up to 4 to 5 hours, then it is down to embers & while still putting out heat , its not enough to keep all the house warm, so it gets reloaded.
How does 300 deg. stack temp with 650 deg stove top sound?
Or 400 deg stack with 750 deg stove top.
or 450 deg stack with a 850 deg stove top-----well thatas getting a bit hot, even for me,
but that stove has been there & done that, in fact,it likes to, every chance it gets but I snarfle it down a little, just to keep temps on the safe side.
With a 500 deg stack temp ,it puts out a 925 deg stove top & can go more if I push it
but whenever I see that,its snarflling time, real quick like.
I would rather be safe than sorry & I'm not a heat hog. enough heat is all I need.
I'm happy with 75 deg in the house but mom wants 79 deg because she is 96 years cold.
Old & cold, I call it. so 79 deg it is for mom.
I like the stove so much that I have a brand new englander(summersheat) 50-30ncp that I wont install because it might not put out as much heat as what I already got.
But i am holding on to the summersheat because if wood gets to be a high priced commodity
the summersheat will do almost the same job with even less wood.
The conversion has cut my wood usage in half of what i was using back in nov 07.
I was worried about running out of firewood before april & now I know I will have one full woodshed left over for oct 08. (i have 3 woodsheds) 1 full, & the other two 1/2 full each.
I expect to empty the two 1/2 full sheds by april , without touching the full one.