I'm trying to figure out what "normal" looks like for an overnight burn. I have a Jotul Oslo. The draft is fine, the wood is a mix of seasoned hardwood splits from last winter. I rake the coals to the front, load the stove up and put a small igniter split at the very front. I'm getting better about leaving the stove alone with the air open all the way for about 45 minutes or longer to try to get a bit of flame going. But there's not much room in the firebox to let much heat happen anyway, just get the flames started. The stove is not over 300 (and usually less) at this point and I don't think it goes over that all night. This is not enough to get the house warm. During the day I've found that if I want HEAT out of it that I need to load a piece or 2 at a time on top of mostly burned logs to trick up the temperature to around 600 or so. I don't think I could get it much higher than that if I tried. Not that it needs to click along at 700 all day, but I thought I'd get more heat than I'm getting. The stove seems to like hovering around 350 when you aren't paying attention to it. Back to the nighttime quesiton...I don't think that my secondary burners are even working since the temp seems to be so low. I cut the air back gradually to about slightly under 1/4 open. I think that if I left it more open than that I not only wouldn't get an overnight bed of coals but it wouldn't add that much heat anyway. Any suggestions? Thanks.