36 last night when I loaded the stove to go to bed. 74 in the house. This morning 23 outside, 69 inside. Furnace still not being used (set at 60). approximately 1800 sf, just using the Heritage.
firewatcher said:pistonslap said:Laynes, to get a long overnight burn, are you stuffing the firebox full or damping down?
When you guys talk about dampering down, what do you mean and why? Why not let it burn wide open all night to get the maximum heat output through the night then toss on a couple of logs in the morning. I have an insert and it only has one lever for air control. Do the freestanding stoves you guys use work differently?
firewatcher said:pistonslap said:Laynes, to get a long overnight burn, are you stuffing the firebox full or damping down?
When you guys talk about dampering down, what do you mean and why? Why not let it burn wide open all night to get the maximum heat output through the night then toss on a couple of logs in the morning. I have an insert and it only has one lever for air control. Do the freestanding stoves you guys use work differently?
Thank you Thank you (Elvis) The harman is in a different floor in my house the stove insert (the other thread) is going in the basement ... there is no way this harman could heat my house its one of those funny split level housesHarley said:Iceman... Is the accentra the one you are replacing? or based on the other thread - are you adding an insert in the larger room. to supplement the Harmon? (or is the Harmon what you just put in?)
Seems like that is doing the job pretty well.
Welcome, by the way.... another addition to the Western Mass contingent.
Warren said:firewatcher said:pistonslap said:Laynes, to get a long overnight burn, are you stuffing the firebox full or damping down?
When you guys talk about dampering down, what do you mean and why? Why not let it burn wide open all night to get the maximum heat output through the night then toss on a couple of logs in the morning. I have an insert and it only has one lever for air control. Do the freestanding stoves you guys use work differently?
Asking if you are stuffing the firebox OR Dampering Down is sort of like "Do you walk to work or bring your lunch?"
Dampering down is just a term meaning do you close the damper. In this case on your Osburn, it means sliding the air control lever all the way to the left...fully closed.
Freestanding stoves mostly work the same, although I believe a small number have secondary air controls but I could be wrong...(guys?????) CAT stoves (insert or freestanding) have an additional control to open and close the CAT, and some of the more sophisticated stoves, some from PE (summit) and VC just as a couple examples, have techlology that automatically attempts to adjust the amount of air to keep the burn more consistant. Spike or Elk (and many others around here) could do a better job of explaining that stuff.
Burning wide open all night is a recipie for over firing and wasting your fuel. Plus you'll never get an overnight burn doing that. The only way to get an overnight burn is to shut down the air as much as possible and let the secondary combustion do it's work. From my experience, with my Osburn, the amount of heat is really adjusted by the amount of wood in the stove vs the air setting. Granted the air setting will cause the burn to be more vigorous, thus producing more heat, but more heat goes up the chimney too. If you use the air setting on high to get burns going, then damper down and let the secondary burn technology do it's thing, you'll get the most efficient burn. Once I get to a bed of coals, many times during the day I'll open it up more, but that's not practical to wake up and mess with during the night.
The exception to that is on very cold evenings when I will get up and add wood at about 3am. that's where I do wish the firebox were larger. For good overnight burns, I believe that about a 3.0 cuft firebox would be really ideal. It just happens that I installed the largest stove I could fit in my install. (Lopi Revere and Hearthstone Morgan were right there also)
I hope this little brain dump helps.
MountainStoveGuy said:perpetualy cold. Driveway is permafrost. snow is permantly on the ground till spring. House is 64 degrees, stove is cold. 34* outside.
Todd said:You guys out east stole all my cold air. It's been kind of warm here. 50 yesterday and 50's today and Thursday. Didn't have a fire last night because house was still warm enough from the burn the night before. Furnace is set at 69 and has gone off a couple times this morning. It's 2pm right now and I'm firing her up. Next week the cold air returns, and I will be back to 24/7 burning.
Vintage 181 said:MountainStoveGuy said:perpetualy cold. Driveway is permafrost. snow is permantly on the ground till spring. House is 64 degrees, stove is cold. 34* outside.
C'mon MSG get Betsy chugging...it's a torque thing!!
Adirondackwoodburner said:Avalon rainier...Insite temp 80, outside temp teens at night. Gott keep filling her though!
I guess we are just showing off cause of the temp is so up and down nowBeGreen said:Adirondackwoodburner said:Avalon rainier...Insite temp 80, outside temp teens at night. Gott keep filling her though!
What are you folks back east trying to do, melt candles? I couldn't stand a house that hot. I'll bet the humidity is like 5%.
BeGreen said:Adirondackwoodburner said:Avalon rainier...Insite temp 80, outside temp teens at night. Gott keep filling her though!
What are you folks back east trying to do, melt candles? I couldn't stand a house that hot. I'll bet the humidity is like 5%.
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