We Have a New Wood Burning Stove

   / We Have a New Wood Burning Stove #51  
The biggest danger in burning whether someone is home or not has mostly to do with the flue or exhaust. Some people fail to clean out their chimneys on a regular basis resulting in chimney fires. Or burn a fire so hot that it doesn't matter that they have cleaned the chimney. Others fail to use retainer screws when sectioning stove pipe or indeed place combustbles too close to the stovepipes. A solid installation along with yearly maintenance willl certainly alleviate much of the reason why houses go up in flames.

I load my stove the same as you Moss (long ways deep) My method is simply to toss in the wood being careful not to throw it in too hard or else break the rear firebrick. I do no special placement of wood, paper or kindling. As a matter of fact , I do not use any kindling or paper to start fires. I do continuous burns however so my need to use such things is quite diminished. To start a fire, I simply toss in the wood letting it fall as it may until the stove is full, then I place a product called Diamond Strike a Fire somewhere between logs at the bottom and in 1/2 hour , close the stove down. Rarely fails and a box lasts the entire season . 7 bucks at Wally World.
 
   / We Have a New Wood Burning Stove
  • Thread Starter
#52  
Thanks for the advice from all of you. We came home after work and the fire was out except for a few small embers. I snuffed them out and took the opportunity to clean out the ashes. Only the second time in 12 days. That thing really burns everything down to nothin'! :) We went out for the evening, so I didn't build a fire until 9:00. I built a small three log fire and got that going pretty good by 9:30. Then I put in 5 more logs, all about 5-6" diameter. Came back about 25 minutes later and oh my goodness were those logs burning nicely. I shut the air control down to low and checked it every so often until I went to bed around 1:00a.m. Super hot coals. I set a piece of oak in there and it pretty much burst into flames in my hands since the door was open and it had plenty of oxygen. I closed the door and it went back to a nice mellow flame. Got up this morning and still had a nice bed of coals. It was 33 outside and 70 on the first floor. The furnace kicked on for 5 minutes. That's the first time in several days that it came on. I put in three more logs and got them going and shut down the air. We left for the day. I'll see how it looks when I get home tonight. So far, I am very satisfied with it. We'll see when the temps drop more in the next month or two.
 
   / We Have a New Wood Burning Stove #53  
Moss
They'll be a point when it gets steadily cold and you go to continuous burn and when you learn your stove, you will have no need to touch any controls on the stove at all. All you'll need to do is chuck wood in because you would have learned your stove so well that it will keep coals in there hot enough for any wood to catch. The trick is to find the right setting on the stove where it is not shut down so much as to damp out a fire and not open enough so the fire doesn't last. On my Quadrafire which is similar to yours, my magic point is the primary shut all the way while the secondary is pushed in about 3/4 of an inch. Your point will be different I'm betting, but when you find it, you won't have to touch a control for weeks and you'll be able to do 8-10 hour burns with oak when its not so cold (30's)

my stove needs oil burn supplementation when it gets to 27*. I then open the secondary a bit more and I'm chucking in wood every 4-5 hours. At night I'll go back to my 3/4 inch push in so the fire lasts over night.
 
   / We Have a New Wood Burning Stove
  • Thread Starter
#54  
I'm thinking I'll need to pack it with more wood and keep the air control down lower to get the long burns. I'm working my way up to it, but still get a tad nervous packing that thing full and leaving for the day. :p
 
   / We Have a New Wood Burning Stove #55  
I'm thinking I'll need to pack it with more wood and keep the air control down lower to get the long burns. I'm working my way up to it, but still get a tad nervous packing that thing full and leaving for the day. :p

Good Evenin Moss,
Glad to hear your getting the hang of your stove, you will run it with your eyes closed in a short while ! ;) You have one of the new effecient stoves, but I still like to run that baby wide open for about 20 mins in the morning. To get that flue heated up burn any buildup in the pipe from the stove to the chimney ! Im old fashioned and so is the stove but this method has served me well for many many years ! :)
 
   / We Have a New Wood Burning Stove #56  
I understand you're hesitation Moss. The more you come home to a house that is still standing, the more comfortable you'll get.

Scott,that method is also recommended by the stove manufacturer. My method does not allow a slow burn. The stove definitely gets cooler as it burns its load but I still have a 250* stack temp at 8 in the morning. I took out approxitemately 2 cups of fine powdered creasote after I cleaned my chimney this past season from a 16' foot tall, outside placed masonry , uninsulated chimney. That was it. With my old Timberline, the creasote would be piled 2' high at the clean out door. This being in an 11x7 flue size. These new stoves are remarkable in their burn efficiency and run better when run a bit more open. After 5 minutes of closing the stove down, you can no longer see smoke coming out of the chimney.
 
   / We Have a New Wood Burning Stove #57  
Have heated with wood here since '86, here's a pic around Christmas time, was warm enough we didn't have a fire when I made the pics. Nothing like wood heat, but it can be messy.
 

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   / We Have a New Wood Burning Stove
  • Thread Starter
#58  
Looks nice!

I made the mistake of starting a fire Saturday morning. It was in the 50's outside. I thought it was going to cool down that evening, so I threw two small locust logs and one larger piece of cherry on it at 4:30 in the afternoon and set it on low. Well, we had a birthday party for my youngest at 6:30. That cherry log burned for a good 4 hours. 25 people show up. 25 people at 98.6 degrees in a 1300 foot square house with a wood burner.... yikes it got hot in there! :D We had to open the doors and windows. The house was still at 74 the next morning. :)
 
   / We Have a New Wood Burning Stove #60  
Looks nice!

I made the mistake of starting a fire Saturday morning. It was in the 50's outside. I thought it was going to cool down that evening, so I threw two small locust logs and one larger piece of cherry on it at 4:30 in the afternoon and set it on low. Well, we had a birthday party for my youngest at 6:30. That cherry log burned for a good 4 hours. 25 people show up. 25 people at 98.6 degrees in a 1300 foot square house with a wood burner.... yikes it got hot in there! :D We had to open the doors and windows. The house was still at 74 the next morning. :)

Good Evenin Moss,
Yep I have screwed up like that before:confused:, but look how brilliant you would look had the temp really dropped off severely ! ;):)
 

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