Should I give it plenty of air to get the most heat or do I actually get more heat when I cut the air supply down?
Bspring said:Should I give it plenty of air to get the most heat or do I actually get more heat when I cut the air supply down?
Battenkiller said:Geez, Jags, even when I try to be brief I use four times as many words as you do to say the same thing. %-P
Bspring said:Should I give it plenty of air to get the most heat or do I actually get more heat when I cut the air supply down?
Jags said:My practice is to run wide open till I get over 500F, then half air till up to operating temp, then clamp air down for long cruise.
Bspring said:How are you guys getting the temperature? Mine does not have a guage on it.
Backwoods Savage said:I've operated a few stoves now and have not varied much in how we get them hot. Naturally, having good dry wood is the biggest key. Basically what we do is run the stove at full draft until the wood starts to char a bit and then usually cut the draft to about half. Then we watch the flue temperature along with the stove top temperature. If the flue temperature gets too high, cut that draft more. On our present stove this means 400 degree flue measured on a horizontal single wall pipe. Sometimes the temperature gets a bit above that 400 but 400 is what we aim for.
Others are correct. If you leave the draft full open, you are really heating the chimney and not getting the benefit of the stove heating sooner. Cut the draft and the stove will heat up much faster. However, much depends upon the fuel and the installation. Of course, chimney type and height are critical too.
And we start our fires using Super Cedars.
Bspring said:How are you guys getting the temperature? Mine does not have a guage on it.
lillyrat said:With my Summit I have to slowly run the flue temp up to at least 500 (single wall magnetic therm) to get any heat out of the stovetop (above 550). Last year was my first year burning and was only able to get it up to 570.
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