Recently installed a blaze king princess insert. Overall we're very happy.
Burning ash that was standing dead for years and reads 14-20% moisture at room temp, fresh split, along grain. I have been reloading with the cat still active and running at highest thermostat setting until I have full flames and outside char on the logs. Typically this means I'm turning the air down when the cat probe reads at the very top of the active range.
After our initial small paint curing fires I was a somewhat alarmed to see the cat temp probe far exceed the active range (6 o'clock position). Calling BK, they told me not to be alarmed and just burn as needed for my heating needs, the cats start overactive and then calm down over time. That said, the manual also alludes to damaging the cat by overheating it...
With some colder nights I've been loading more fully and not turning the thermostat down as completely. This morning about 40 minutes after reload the cat thermostat had completed over a full 360 and made it back into the labeled inactive zone (8 o'clock) but was glowing cherry red and obviously cooking. Fan was on high, thermostat was at 25%.
1) when should I be concerned about cat temps causing damage?
2) I'm not really understanding the "hyper active" description on a chemistry / physics basis. My naive assumption would be that the cat temp is defined by the flux of unburnt wood gases passed through it and the rate at which it can transfer heat out to the stove/room. Unless it were to dramatically lose efficiency (and presumably increase emissions) what's going to keep it from overheating similarly after break-in if I'm putting the same amount of fuel through it?
Thanks so much.
Draft is 24' of pretty straight shot insulated chimney liner if that's relevant.
Burning ash that was standing dead for years and reads 14-20% moisture at room temp, fresh split, along grain. I have been reloading with the cat still active and running at highest thermostat setting until I have full flames and outside char on the logs. Typically this means I'm turning the air down when the cat probe reads at the very top of the active range.
After our initial small paint curing fires I was a somewhat alarmed to see the cat temp probe far exceed the active range (6 o'clock position). Calling BK, they told me not to be alarmed and just burn as needed for my heating needs, the cats start overactive and then calm down over time. That said, the manual also alludes to damaging the cat by overheating it...
With some colder nights I've been loading more fully and not turning the thermostat down as completely. This morning about 40 minutes after reload the cat thermostat had completed over a full 360 and made it back into the labeled inactive zone (8 o'clock) but was glowing cherry red and obviously cooking. Fan was on high, thermostat was at 25%.
1) when should I be concerned about cat temps causing damage?
2) I'm not really understanding the "hyper active" description on a chemistry / physics basis. My naive assumption would be that the cat temp is defined by the flux of unburnt wood gases passed through it and the rate at which it can transfer heat out to the stove/room. Unless it were to dramatically lose efficiency (and presumably increase emissions) what's going to keep it from overheating similarly after break-in if I'm putting the same amount of fuel through it?
Thanks so much.
Draft is 24' of pretty straight shot insulated chimney liner if that's relevant.