Debatable. Not for all.Embrace the dirty glass. Much better than the alternative
Debatable. Not for all.Embrace the dirty glass. Much better than the alternative
What does 240lbs get you?We know that the king has a fixed minimum burn rate, we know that wood has a certain btu per #. So now all you need is more lbs of wood in the fuel tank. I wouldn't use doug fir for this. Say, you could fit 120# of wood into the firebox. Yeah baby, at 12000 btu per hour that's 100 hours of burn time. But it's also a huge amount of BTU of potential energy sitting in there like a grenade and nobody is going to be awake for 100 hours to monitor it.
You can do the math to be exact but 150# should get you to 5 days.
Debatable. Not for all.
@ejn327 Are you able to get your window to clean up running on high? I have tried running on high for 30 minutes with plenty of flame and could only get the areas of where the airwash ports dump air to clean the glass, so I get two round spots on either side of the window.
Mellow, with this colder weather upon us, what kind of burn times are you seeing now? Any luck with the low and slow burn?
I am still working with @BKVP so take this with a grain of salt, I am getting 10 hour burns with it set on low, but I am getting some flames in the firebox so that might be hurting my burn times. Work has been crazy the last few weeks so I haven't had time to weigh and analyze my wood.[/QUOTE
Copy that. Thanks for the update and keep the news coming
I haven't had any hot coals hanging onto the door, just some pieces of ash that fall right off when I open the door. They haven't gone much past the insert onto the hearth. I have noticed a lot more ash sticking to the door when I load up the insert E/W. When I load it up N/S I don't seem to get as much sticking to the door (15" length splits).One thing I will note about this insert is the wide door, I extended my hearth out to 24" but the door when opened all the way is 30" so you do have possibility of hot coals riding on the door gasket and going past your hearth (had this happen once and have burn marks in my carpet). I have solved this issue by unlatching the door then opening the door slightly then closing it a couple times to shake off the hitchhikers back into the stove/ash lip.
Mellow, I see you are no longer a fellow Appalachian 52 Bay burner. Congratulations on the new Blaze King. Once it gets cold where you live I will be very interested for you to compare the heat output of the Sirocco with your former 52 Bay.
Thanks for the update. Typically was that with a full load of wood or partial? How about shoulder season burning?I burn low and slow through the night with no issues other than the glass getting pitch black dark, but that is to be expected and burns off quickly. Average burn time for me on low was 13.5 hours with plenty of coals for a quick restart.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.