Hi guys, I'm new here. I signed up to get advice on my new wood stove.
I recently installed a Vermont Castings Montpelier II wood insert into my masonry chimney. I chose the Montpelier II because the unit and surround fit my chimney firebox well, it looks decent, and appeared fairly simple to operate. I figured the "single button air control" was marketing speak for a fancy damper. Well, as some of you know, I was wrong. Thanks to these forums, I've learned the phrase "single burn rate" and the implications of that.
For me, that means I start a fire up, the fire rages heating up everything nicely, then hits the coaling stage and rapidly loses temperature. Within an hour I'm loading wood again and fire rages, temp spikes, coals, rinse, repeat. If I load too much or too small of splits, the fire really takes off and I have ZERO CONTROL. I've learned to be conservative when loading wood because I've become paranoid about overfiring the stove.
Video of a startup fire: https://photos.app.goo.gl/HKjgcrraJncatmpB6
I asked about this on another forum and someone suggested the unit is over-drafting because it was intended and tested with a chimney height of around 11-14 ft. My chimney is about 23ft from the top of the stove to the cap. He suggested installing a flu damper which would be great... but this is an insert with a surround. I saw another thread here where some rigged a damper in the stove pipe collar. This is an expensive (yes, overpriced) stove. I'd hate to screw something up by over-firing or a bad hack damper job.
Do I have any options? I'm stuck with this thing either way. I just hate that I can't trust it.
Single burn rate seems like a misnomer. It's more like "whatever burn rate your chimney draft choses".
I recently installed a Vermont Castings Montpelier II wood insert into my masonry chimney. I chose the Montpelier II because the unit and surround fit my chimney firebox well, it looks decent, and appeared fairly simple to operate. I figured the "single button air control" was marketing speak for a fancy damper. Well, as some of you know, I was wrong. Thanks to these forums, I've learned the phrase "single burn rate" and the implications of that.
For me, that means I start a fire up, the fire rages heating up everything nicely, then hits the coaling stage and rapidly loses temperature. Within an hour I'm loading wood again and fire rages, temp spikes, coals, rinse, repeat. If I load too much or too small of splits, the fire really takes off and I have ZERO CONTROL. I've learned to be conservative when loading wood because I've become paranoid about overfiring the stove.
Video of a startup fire: https://photos.app.goo.gl/HKjgcrraJncatmpB6
I asked about this on another forum and someone suggested the unit is over-drafting because it was intended and tested with a chimney height of around 11-14 ft. My chimney is about 23ft from the top of the stove to the cap. He suggested installing a flu damper which would be great... but this is an insert with a surround. I saw another thread here where some rigged a damper in the stove pipe collar. This is an expensive (yes, overpriced) stove. I'd hate to screw something up by over-firing or a bad hack damper job.
Do I have any options? I'm stuck with this thing either way. I just hate that I can't trust it.
Single burn rate seems like a misnomer. It's more like "whatever burn rate your chimney draft choses".