I’m looking for some advice on running my new Alderlea T6. This isn’t my first stove, but my first season with the Alderlea. My issue I’m having is the stove burning too hot (at least I think).
My setup includes a stove pipe with 90 degree bend into a masonry chimney with 6” insulated liner (brand new) going up approximately 25-30’. I know this is a tall chimney so the draft is strong.
The issue I’m having is if I put more than 4 or so splits in, the stove gets very hot. Right now the stovetop maxed out at about 820F on the hottest spot I could find with IR gun with five 4-6” thick splits in there, all loaded N/S with very little air space between them. When I loaded, the stovetop was 300f and I shut down the air about halfway as soon as the wood caught fire, and shut it down all the way within 5 minutes. It was at about 350 when I shut the air all the way down, and continued climbing to over 800 over the course of an hour. It’s also not that cold here yet, it’s currently about 45f outside so I know the draft will be even stronger in midwinter when it’s ok the single digits or below zero.
I’m wondering if it would actually be better to fully load the stove? Would less airflow around the perimeters of the firebox help to keep it from taking off so much? I’m just nervous to try it. Do I maybe need to just shut the air down completely as soon as the logs catch fire? Maybe 800-850 stovetop isn’t terrible? I can’t find a temperature for overfire in the manual. I’ll also add that that temperature is in a very specific spot on the stovetop and the rest of it is reading variously from 700-800. Looking for any feedback. Thanks
My setup includes a stove pipe with 90 degree bend into a masonry chimney with 6” insulated liner (brand new) going up approximately 25-30’. I know this is a tall chimney so the draft is strong.
The issue I’m having is if I put more than 4 or so splits in, the stove gets very hot. Right now the stovetop maxed out at about 820F on the hottest spot I could find with IR gun with five 4-6” thick splits in there, all loaded N/S with very little air space between them. When I loaded, the stovetop was 300f and I shut down the air about halfway as soon as the wood caught fire, and shut it down all the way within 5 minutes. It was at about 350 when I shut the air all the way down, and continued climbing to over 800 over the course of an hour. It’s also not that cold here yet, it’s currently about 45f outside so I know the draft will be even stronger in midwinter when it’s ok the single digits or below zero.
I’m wondering if it would actually be better to fully load the stove? Would less airflow around the perimeters of the firebox help to keep it from taking off so much? I’m just nervous to try it. Do I maybe need to just shut the air down completely as soon as the logs catch fire? Maybe 800-850 stovetop isn’t terrible? I can’t find a temperature for overfire in the manual. I’ll also add that that temperature is in a very specific spot on the stovetop and the rest of it is reading variously from 700-800. Looking for any feedback. Thanks