Do wood stoves burn most efficiently with the air control all the way open or all the way closed or somewhere in the middle? By "efficient" I mean complete and clean combustion that also maximizes the amount of heat that goes into the room, not up the chimney.
I'm pretty sure that having the air control all the way closed on my Regency I2400 is not the most efficient setting because the glass smokes up in that case which indicates less than complete combustion. I would have thought that keeping the air supply all the way open would be most efficient but the manual that came with my stove says: "Once a bed of coals has been established, you may adjust the draft control to a low setting to operate the unit in its most efficient mode." So they seem to be saying an air setting on the low side is most efficient. But how low?
Am I right to think that the more air you give the stove the more complete the combustion but also the more heat you lose up the chimney? How do you decide what air setting is best?
I'm pretty sure that having the air control all the way closed on my Regency I2400 is not the most efficient setting because the glass smokes up in that case which indicates less than complete combustion. I would have thought that keeping the air supply all the way open would be most efficient but the manual that came with my stove says: "Once a bed of coals has been established, you may adjust the draft control to a low setting to operate the unit in its most efficient mode." So they seem to be saying an air setting on the low side is most efficient. But how low?
Am I right to think that the more air you give the stove the more complete the combustion but also the more heat you lose up the chimney? How do you decide what air setting is best?