Thanks guys, I hate to ask a million questions, but its like trying to reinvent the wheel. There seems to be so much experience here. Ok so here's a few things I can add to the replys.
I did figure out that using oven cleaner on the glass and not wiping it off clean and letting itdry 100% before firing was part of the problem, I think.
Save money and do it FFJake's easy way . . . ball up a sheet of newspaper, get it wet, dip it in the fine, gray ash and then scour the glass -- the black should come off relatively easily . . . or do it the even easier way, get the stove nice and hot (of course you can't just think it looks hot, it will help to have a thermometer to tell if it is truly hot since the presence of lots of flames does not necessarily mean it's really hot. We'll see, I cleaned it tis morning and didn't burn it all day. Fired a small flash type fire tonite and looked better. Was up at around 400 F with my thermometer located centered on the stove midway between the fron and the back of the stove exposed top. Last night had it at about 550 F, kinda got gun shy tonite. When my stove was in the cooling down phase, around 400 F, heard a ping. 1st thing I thought from reading anoter thread was a weld popped? talked to my installer who says he has had similar problems with the installation I have. The metal liner that is in the original fireplace he says will sometimes make some ungodly noises. He asked if I saw any smoke in the room, which I didn't. He didn't seem concerned and said that since the liner is in a top sealed masonary chimney there would smoke coming in my room if something did crack?
It's often quite normal to hear pinging and ticking sounds as a stove heats up or cools down . . . pinging is OK, loud bangs are bad.
The other thing I saw was what looked like tiny particles of hard concrete or furnace cement maybe? I know he put some around the clamped connection to the flue as an added precaution. Wondering if it wasn't quite cured and the heat cracked some? Any ideas?
Was this cement inside the stove? If so, it is possible that there may have been some cement that has come out . . . again, sometimes normal over the course of burning.
I have wood that I cut in October. It was standing dead, no bark, I think maybe elm or a nut tree of some type. There's a buck of them where I hunt. They kinda look like big old telephone poles. I thought sinethey were dead that they would be ready to burn pretty quickly, hence theOctober cut / spilit and December burn. I also bougt "supposed" seasoned wood from a local. He claims it was stacked inside for 3 - 7 years, but I'm having my doubts. It's weighty and the bark is still tight. No big cracks on the ends. Looks 1/2 decent. Some kind of oak. It was split, but in huge pieces I had to cut and split it down smaller, must have been sized for an outside burner?
In my opinion there is only one true way to tell if wood is seasoned and good to go . . . and that's with a moisture meter. However, since I'm a cheap SOB I go with another semi-reliable way of determing if the wood is good to go or not and that's simply making sure the wood I use has been cut, split and stacked 9-12 months before I use it . . . it's not fool-proof and you can't use this "system" on some wood species such as oak, but usually this works out OK. In my experience with standing dead wood last year I found out that there is dead wood and then there is really dead wood . . . the wood that is really dead with bark missing may be burned sooner . . . but even in my case I was bucking and splitting in early to mid-Summer before using the wood in October or November and sometimes then I would run into wood that was not as well seasoned as it should have been. As for buying wood . . . "seasoned" can mean so many things to so many people . . . was the wood cut and split for 3-7 years or just laying around in log length or 4 foot lengths for those years . . . there can be a difference. Weight and cracks of the wood can sometimes give you an idea if the wood is seasoned or not . . . although it's not a fool-proof method unless you're used to knowing how heavy the wood should feel roughly and sometimes the wood may be dry and not be cracked.
So when you guys talk about splits, medium and large just what sizes are we speaking of?
Depends on who you ask. For me: small = 3-5 inches, medium = 5-8 inches and large = 8+ inches in diameter.
The owners manual says to put a trench in your ashes. Which way does the trench go? North south or east west?
Again, it depends . . . depends on your stove and the way you lay in your wood. I always do East-West loading due to the shape of the firebox. Since my air is coming from the front I make a trench north to south going back from the doghouse to the back of the stove . . . which results in the East-West splits "bridging" the gap.
It also says to slide the baffles to the back and intelock? I slid them all the way back and then together as tight as I could over the secondary air tube but couldn't feel any locking? Am I ok or missing something?
I'm no help to you here . . . no idea.
Bet you guys dread us newbies asking a gazillion questions, but thanks for your guidance.
Actually no . . . we were all newbies as well . . . and thanks to many other veterans here we learned how to burn better, safer and more efficiently . . . and many of us stick around and try to help others since it's part of the pay-it-forward philosophy of helping out others as we were helped out . . . plus it makes us seem a lot smarter than we actually are (well in my case at least.
) The refreshments are on me should we cross trails, happy hunting!