kf6hap
Minister of Fire
I just found a small piece that was trimmed off. It is 7/8" wide and looks like the graphoglass stuff made by Rutland sold at Ace Hardware.
This is my first stove. I do like the stove. Long burn times and that was important to me. Also it's very easy to operate. Load wood, burn on high for 20 to 30 min, then sent the thermostat to desired temp. Repeat. The smell does bother me and I want it fixed.kf6hap and Ohio Do you have any reference for the smoke smell you are getting. What I mean is have you ever had another wood burning
stove before. I have never had a stove or fireplace but I would seem to think that any stove or fireplace will have "some" smell no matter
the brand type or kind. This smoke smell issue really freaks me out. Although you say your are still happy you keep posting on here to indicate
all is not well in swellville. I understand this and I want a perfect stove too but I am still researching different stoves.
As far as I am concerned, the BK is the best stove on the market. The most important feature of a wood stove is turn down-the lowest BTU output attainable without the polluting, creosoting up the flue system or becoming finicky and requiring constant adjustment. This extreme turn down rate gives you the wonderfully long burn times and fuel efficiency. Maximum heat out is important to be sure but controllability is equally important. The action of the thermostatic controller on the BK is excellent-unmatched by any other stove.
All of the operational and smoke problems vanish when the chimney system is proper. This applies not only to BK stoves, but ALL wood stoves.
A proper chimney system (anybody please correct me if you disagree) is 16' of 6" flue with no bends. The stove to ceiling pipe must be double walled. If you have bends, a few feet more will be needed. If most of the flue system is in the outside (unshielded from the cold), a few feet extra might be needed also.
Every installation will have some variations, so the above numbers are not a concrete thing, but they are very close.
I agree that the thermostat is a great feature. I'd like to have it for burning down the coals automatically. The Woodstocks I've had have run well after initially setting the air to cruise. The Keystone has a small air hole in the ash pan housing, so the coals pretty much take care of themselves, Fireview I had to open the air on the coals a little. The Dutchwest needs a little air added in the middle of the burn to keep cranking the heat, and a little more at the end on the coals. A bit too much fiddling, but it's just my backup stove. There's one guy who put an ash pan hole in his IS, and says the coals are totally burned down by the end of the load.A proper chimney system (anybody please correct me if you disagree) is 16' of 6" flue with no bends.
Altitude correction
What are your outdoor temps like now?
Did it take care of the smoke smell?I just placed ~10' of 6" single wall pipe inside my 8" chimney. This brings it down to the required 6". Need to burn for a few days to analyze.
Magnehelic readings:
At 600F flue it was and remains .11"
At 200F flue it was .03" and is now .05". Substantially higher.
Update on 2-12 added 6" pipe to the last section. Now the full chimney is 6"X17' no bends.
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Interesting points:
The thermostat is quicker to respond to heat request increases. The stove takes a bit longer to cool down when turning the thermostat down as the stronger draw is pulling somewhat more air through the damper plate hole. Comparing the Ashford convection + radiation stove to my other 100% radiative stoves, the other rooms are warmer. My wife says the heat is more consistent. The cast iron outer encasement really goes a long way towards smoothing out the heat flow and is a stove of beauty too.
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