i seem to be getting too much draft with my new ( new to me) regency hearth heater insert ( H2100) its one year old, i relined the whole chimney with 6" 306Ti flex liner, its about 18-19' worth of pipe, a small offset to one side maybe 1' offset so overall the pipe is pretty much all a straight shot straight up the inside of my clay lined chimney.
the first couple of fires i had to test it and make sure all was well it was maybe 35 degrees out and it seemed to work well, if you closed the draft rod all the way it would choke the fire out so there was no flames, pull it out all the way it it would flame right up and burn nice and hot.
now the problem, last week it finally got sorta cold, like 22 degrees, the first few hours the stove worked like before if you closed the rod down it would shut the flames down real good, but once i got a major bed of deep red hot coals after 4-6 hours and would load a new log and open the rod as the manaul suggests the fire would take right off and cook that new log and you and put out major heat but now when i close the rod down to simmer down the fire it wont choke the flames down low, infact it woulndt even shut them down enough to keep the flames from going up and around the "baffle plate" in the top of the stove. i was worried that it might over fire the stove, but its not running that hot but its certainly putting out a LOT more flames than i think it should with the draft rod fully closed. i thought the draft rod would pretty much choke out any fire if you closed it all the way??? i have checked the door and it seems to seal nice, i have stuck paper in it in various spots and closed it and theres resistance to try to pull the paper out from the door and stove frame. the door does have shims you can swap to crush the door seal more but to me the door seal seems like its decent everywhere already???? is there some other place that this stove could be sucking in air other than the draft rod or door thats making it burn excessively when the rod is closed down?? i sealed all the stove joints down by the stove itself (T that comes off the back off the stove, then unoin to the flex pipe) so i think thats good, plus even if those joints did leak would that make the fire really take off with the draft rod closed, i wouldnt think the possible air leaks there would be able to help feed a fire in the firebox???? is there any way to check to see that the draft rod is indeed closing off the air and isnt somehow getting stuck a little bit on these stoves??? i could swap some shims to tighten the door more but i really think its sealed good already??
any info or insight would be appreciated!
the first couple of fires i had to test it and make sure all was well it was maybe 35 degrees out and it seemed to work well, if you closed the draft rod all the way it would choke the fire out so there was no flames, pull it out all the way it it would flame right up and burn nice and hot.
now the problem, last week it finally got sorta cold, like 22 degrees, the first few hours the stove worked like before if you closed the rod down it would shut the flames down real good, but once i got a major bed of deep red hot coals after 4-6 hours and would load a new log and open the rod as the manaul suggests the fire would take right off and cook that new log and you and put out major heat but now when i close the rod down to simmer down the fire it wont choke the flames down low, infact it woulndt even shut them down enough to keep the flames from going up and around the "baffle plate" in the top of the stove. i was worried that it might over fire the stove, but its not running that hot but its certainly putting out a LOT more flames than i think it should with the draft rod fully closed. i thought the draft rod would pretty much choke out any fire if you closed it all the way??? i have checked the door and it seems to seal nice, i have stuck paper in it in various spots and closed it and theres resistance to try to pull the paper out from the door and stove frame. the door does have shims you can swap to crush the door seal more but to me the door seal seems like its decent everywhere already???? is there some other place that this stove could be sucking in air other than the draft rod or door thats making it burn excessively when the rod is closed down?? i sealed all the stove joints down by the stove itself (T that comes off the back off the stove, then unoin to the flex pipe) so i think thats good, plus even if those joints did leak would that make the fire really take off with the draft rod closed, i wouldnt think the possible air leaks there would be able to help feed a fire in the firebox???? is there any way to check to see that the draft rod is indeed closing off the air and isnt somehow getting stuck a little bit on these stoves??? i could swap some shims to tighten the door more but i really think its sealed good already??
any info or insight would be appreciated!