Rick @ Great Northeast said:
Really, are some of you pellet stove owners abscessed with cleaning? Because what I've read here, just doesn’t seem right. I mean to clean the glass and stove every day, is that really necessary or do some have nothing better to do? The comments about scraping burn pot and vacuuming ever day along with a every week big clean just does not make sense, it's almost like OCD, not necessary but do it anyway why? Everyone wants to have the best burning of pellets and the most btu's out of their stove but when I read about the frequencies of when and what is cleaned it just seems like over kill to me who is really a novice with pellet stoves. So questions is," are some of you telling the truth the whole truth about your schedule of cleaning your pellet stove"?
Rick
Check your manual and remember the following then you can judge for yourself.
Cleaning frequency is driven strictly by the amount of ash produced by the pellets you burn and the number of bags you feed the stove.
For example burning dirt in a bag pellets may require you to clean the burn pot once or even two times a day when you burn a couple of bags a day.
The same stove with the same settings burning a high end pellet may go for 3 or 4 days before you have to clean the burn pot.
We won't even mention folks operating or have setup their stoves incorrectly.
For me I clean mine once a week, the entire process from turn off to fire in the stove again is under an hour and I can do it in 30 minutes if needed.
It is all ash driven.
So some folks want a nice clear look at the fire so they clean their stove glass once a day, some folks don't burn over night so they clean things in the fire box every morning before they light their stoves, some folks don't burn while at work so they clean things in the firebox before they light the stove when they get home. Some folks do partial cleanings once a week and a really deep cleaning every ton. Your stove, pellets, and to some degree personal preferences will dictate your cleaning schedule.
The thing to carry away from this is that a clean stove is a happy, SAFE, and warm stove. 80+% of all stove problems are due to ash in the stove system somewhere.