Yes, that's what's on my business card anyway. Thank you for the compliemnts regarding your stove. I hope you enjoy it for many decades.
Chris
Chris, my husband is home tonight from a week long business trip. We never planned for me to do the shakedown cruise with this wood stove by myself but that's what happened. We had a Nor'easter, temps dropped, we have dry wood, I'M GOING TO USE THIS WOOD STOVE.
Tonight I vacuumed out the fire box (with a certified ash vacuum) and started the stone cold stove from zero with nothing but newspaper, one Super Cedar fire starter broken into four pieces and an average load of wood.
I followed your advice and the advice from our stove shop owner. I started the whole thing much slower. I put the load of wood that we'll use overnight tonight in the stove, on top of a bed of crumpled up newspaper. It's not a huge load of wood and there was plenty of air gaps. I disengaged the cat, turned the control to "high," lit the Super Cedar and the newspaper, closed the door but didn't latch it, and let it catch.
When the bottom logs were burning well and the cat thermometer was about a third of the way into active, I latched the door and engaged the cat. I left the burn control on "high" for a few more minutes, until it was obvious that the logs were still lit, then I stepped the control down from "high" to the middle of "normal" over a few minutes time.
Perfect! We have a pleasant, shoulder season burn that's not running us out of here.
Before we go to bed I'll turn it down one more time, to the lower margin of "normal." Based on this week's experience with the stove, it will stay lit and that will be plenty of heat.
I told my husband before I started that he wasn't going to believe how easily this stove lights, stays lit, establishes a burn and is easy to control. The stove made me look really, really good.
It lit up just like that, went right into an active state on the cat, stayed lit, and the burn control is excellent.
We won't have to touch this stove again until sometime tomorrow evening, if then. Neither of us has ever been around a wood stove that was so easy. No fiddling, no struggling, no messing with it. My husband was super impressed.
Incidentally, the HVAC circulating fan trick is working really well with this stove in this house. Based on our experience with our pellet stove in town, I didn't have high hopes for that. It's working really well here. I keep the fan set on "circulate." It comes on about once every 15 minutes (I haven't timed it) and stays on for about 5 minutes. It really does seem to move the heat around the house.
Thank you for your help, Chris- this stove is AWESOME.
P.S. Edited to add: I DID NOT SET OFF ALL OF THE SMOKE ALARMS TONIGHT EITHER. So starting it slower is the way to go for us. Could be that we're finished curing the finish, too. That being said, the smoke alarm that is almost directly over the stove is not engaged- the rest are. I will put that alarm back up on the ceiling in a few minutes to make sure it won't lose its mind on us before we go to bed.
One of our neighbors stopped by yesterday and commiserated over the smoke alarm issue. He recommended replacing the smoke alarm over the stove with a heat alarm. He told me what to look up on Amazon. Sure enough, the company makes a heat detector that will replace the smoke detector and plug right into the existing system. I monitored the temperature of the ceiling at that site to make sure that it doesn't get hot enough up there, even during start up, to trigger the heat alarm. Looks like that will work, so I plan to order that heat alarm from Amazon.