I went to a house fire last night, ended up getting pretty wet and had to deal with frozen gear and a soaked sweatshirt underneath, got home and loaded my princess just like yours, took a shower and then turned the t-stat off of my bake setting, went to bed, low temp was 20f with a refreshing 20mph gusty wind so I had the blower on medium.
When I woke up this morning my upstairs living room is sitting at 70, and only 2/3 of the load was burnt through so I turned the t-stat back up to burn more down so I can do a full re-load before I leave for work later this morning. Having this BK dialed in like I do, I dont know how others deal with 6-8hr loads that are found in other stoves when it gets cold out.
I'm looking to change stoves. The stove I have now is pretty good but I'm not burning it much because of the lower burn times. It gets about 6-7 hours of burn and needs somewhat constant babying. It is a jotul F500 so it can crank out the heat but by house is kind of chopped up and doesn't do well with transferring the heat and it doesn't really like to run low and slow. I'm looking to get an Ashford 30 to replace it. I'm only burning standing dead pine and I want a realistic opinion on what I can expect for burn times on low, medium and high. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
First thing I would do is take a handful of your "standing dead Pine" and do a fresh split on it for a immediate moisture check on the freshly exposed inner face. Be sure the pieces selected for eventual testing are indoors long enough to be up to room temp prior to splitting/testing. Do you have a moisture meter?
I'm looking to change stoves. The stove I have now is pretty good but I'm not burning it much because of the lower burn times. It gets about 6-7 hours of burn and needs somewhat constant babying. It is a jotul F500 so it can crank out the heat but by house is kind of chopped up and doesn't do well with transferring the heat and it doesn't really like to run low and slow. I'm looking to get an Ashford 30 to replace it. I'm only burning standing dead pine and I want a realistic opinion on what I can expect for burn times on low, medium and high. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Holy heck, I haven’t been here in forever. Glad to see the BK madness still going
I have an Ashford 30 and also mostly burn standing dead pine (beetle killed lodgepole). Temps this winter are mild, with overnight lows and daytime highs ranging from 15-35 Fahrenheit +/-. I have no problem getting 24 hour burns on a full load of 8-10 splits at these temperatures. The fastest I've ever burned through a load was about 9 hours on med-high when the temps were -20F and below, but I've never had to continuously run on high.
But it will depend more on how your house is set up as far as size and insulation, etc. My home is only 1400 square feet with fair insulation.
Edit: also be aware the Ashfords are very finicky about chimney, so verify your size and height before moving ahead.
Thanks for the input. What don't they like for chimney setups?
Nothing else on the market comes close! Your signature says you have a noncat PE. This is the BK thread. Are you going to upgrade?
My 27 is in a vacation home. I don’t burn full time anymore and miss it all winter.At least if one is (gasp) not going to run a BK, the Super 27 is a very fine option IMO...
Get cutting!Here’s the 2 left. It’s going to have to be a really cold day before I plug these in
Lol, no kidding! I’ve got about 1 cord ready to burn now. Better than I expected really. Got an unlimited supply of fir snags but have to stagger the two drying racks which are 8’ . Not super dry but seems to burn pretty good after a couple weeks in the stove room. Be glad to be more prepared next year for sureGet cutting!
This is one of my piles I need to whittle on. That’s my elk hunting buddy in the yellow coat.Lol, no kidding! I’ve got about 1 cord ready to burn now. Better than I expected really. Got an unlimited supply of fir snags but have to stagger the two drying racks which are 8’ . Not super dry but seems to burn pretty good after a couple weeks in the stove room. Be glad to be more prepared next year for sure
Looks like almost a truck load of alder!This is one of my piles I need to whittle on. That’s my elk hunting buddy in the yellow coat.
Alder and birch. All the dead and dying ones we cleaned off my property. Well, not all. I do have a couple (smaller) piles, plus quite a few logs scattered that never made it to any pile. I could keep a woodchuck occupied for a looong time.Looks like almost a truck load of alder!
Holy heck, I haven’t been here in forever. Glad to see the BK madness still going
I see much the same thing, I believe with the resistance of going through the cat the air flow wouldn't be nearly as strong as just an opening. Just my theory and observation
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