westcliffe01
Veteran Member
The hydrocarbon vapors occur in the first 1/3 of the burn. After that it is just carbon burning to produce CO and CO2. So the latter part of the burn only matters in that you do not want a CO producing device in your home. If there is enough air flow, you will be getting CO2.
For northerly lattitudes there is little that can beat a proper catalytic stove like the Blaze King. Particularly when you have only softwood with a lot of resin content.
For northerly lattitudes there is little that can beat a proper catalytic stove like the Blaze King. Particularly when you have only softwood with a lot of resin content.