Hey everyone. We have a new jotul f45 hooked up to an exterior masonry chimney via 6" single wall pipe.
We've been burning from Dec 1-Feb 8 24 hours a day for about 5 days at a time. Gone through about a cord. All oak not ideal around 22%.
I took apart the stove pipe today and was shocked to see so much creosote so close to the stove. It almost looks like creosote is building up in the stove itself. I try to burn hot (stove top at 600) all day then we pack it full at 11:00 pm shut it down and wake up to a solid coal bed at 8 everyorning.
Looking for any insight on this. Is this an excessive level of creosote?
Why is it so close to the stove (I measure occasionally with infrared and get 400 or so 12" up the stove pipe )
What could I do differently. Could the overnight burns be the cause of this? The winter here has been mild. Can't imagine what this would look like after 2 cords.
We've been burning from Dec 1-Feb 8 24 hours a day for about 5 days at a time. Gone through about a cord. All oak not ideal around 22%.
I took apart the stove pipe today and was shocked to see so much creosote so close to the stove. It almost looks like creosote is building up in the stove itself. I try to burn hot (stove top at 600) all day then we pack it full at 11:00 pm shut it down and wake up to a solid coal bed at 8 everyorning.
Looking for any insight on this. Is this an excessive level of creosote?
Why is it so close to the stove (I measure occasionally with infrared and get 400 or so 12" up the stove pipe )
What could I do differently. Could the overnight burns be the cause of this? The winter here has been mild. Can't imagine what this would look like after 2 cords.