So are you saying it's possible to burn a good-quality secondary stove pretty low? I'm early in the learning curve playing with my SIL's PE, so I don't know yet. Can you burn it with no flame off the wood in the box, only secondary? That's what I'm hoping is possible.Well it's allot more complicated than that. There are plenty of other ways to increase retention time and heat transfer efficency without using a cat....
Lol no...It's in the design of the stove. Some stoves are better at it than others.
I've seen stoves that have heat fins on top of the box, like the old Manchester, so that should save more heat into the room I would think. What are the stove design features that you're referring to?
Yeah, that was my first thoughts as well; A conflagration in the box could burning the creo before it ever gets to the flue, or there are high flue temps even at the top of the stack so that creo can't condense.The fact that you are getting that little buildup in your chimney tells me you are dumping massive amounts of heat up the chimney. That means wasted BTUs.
With observation over a period of time, you'll get to know about how hot your flue temp needs to be, and for how long, in order to get a reliable reburn going. The top part of the stove, where the reburn happens, is going to lag behind the flue gasses in getting up to temp, that's why I mentioned the time component. Then theoretically you can start cutting air as you get close to that temp/time on a fresh load each time. Of course, each load will be a little different depending on specie of wood used, and other stuff. At least I think that is how secondary guys may do it, similar to what I've done on cat stoves. Then again, I may be fulla carp, and it wouldn't be the first time either. 😆What temperature should the stove pipe be to shut it down?
Many times though, I don't track my flue temp too close other than to make sure it's not getting too hot (don't want the dreaded glowing pipe) but instead go by visual assessment of how the burn is progressing, and for how long, to determine when to close the bypass and try for a solid cat light-off.
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