turbojoe
Member
I figured a bed temperature graph of a burn cycle would be all over the place.It would be great to meet Dan. I reviewed his website last night - he's certainly put tons of effort into his product.
I want to be careful here to not digress into any kind of comparison between what I'm doing and what Dan has already done. I have great respect for anybody who takes the initiative, the risk and the time to put a product in play on the market. Its too bad the stove mfgr's don't wake up and smell the coffee - Dan's work makes it clear there's much much more to be gained in performance with active control. So KUDOS to Dan!!
As for the VC stove I have, yes its a CAT stove. I instrumented the CAT a couple weeks ago and noted on a typical burn with the VC thermostat working, the CAT temps are all over the place. It would light off around 500F and then get up to 1400 or more, then slowly burn back down with lots of staggering in the temp profile as the wood pile shifted, and the draft changed during the burn. I could do better at controlling the burn with manual manipulation of the Pri air control. Not great.
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The stove will put out tons of heat, but when its running hard like 1000+ CAT and stove body temps 600+ its too hot for my little house. I want a longer, lower cruise and that's why I want more control over the air. The metal coil thermostat on my VC Encore just doesn't have enough throw and the primary/secondary air systems are tied together (read: EPA) so the whole thing just doesn't throttle well from what I can see. This is VC's implementation of the thermo spring, and their air system. I'm gonna change ALL that
edit: UPS truck arriving today with thermocouple amps and logic shifter. More on the way from Omega soon...
It's hard to hold a cat at a steady temp while in Exotherm. This is the state i want to hold mine at as long as possible.
A cat can be active and not lit off, it's still converting some CO but there is not the benefit of a 1200/1500 F Cat heating the stove top.
Just thinking out loud