ashley bay window stove AP5660L

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ovenman99

New Member
Dec 3, 2014
4
harbor beach mi
1051805.jpg does anyone have one of these or any info on this stove looking at buying one

thanks in advance

AP5660L is model
 
If you do a search, there is many new post about them. Most not that good.
 
I have this stove. I have no issues with it mechanically. The hopper is not 55lbs or 60lbs like it advertised as both. Any questions feel free to ask
 
I have this same stove, installed new end of October, knock on wood, no mechanical issues with stove. But stove likes shorter in length pellets tho, with long pellets, I think it was bridging across auger and had a few E3 errors.
 
Looking at it (but not owning one) what I see right of is the ash pan is tiny and it loos to be a PITA to clean the glass....
 
The stove does what it was designed to do, throw out heat, it does this well on settings 3 - 5 (mine does anyway).
The stove is easy to clean, as is the glass, and not as messy as some other stoves when it comes to cleaning them.

The hopper is not as big as rated in the manual, more like 48 - 50lbs.

The stove is pre-set with the heat range and room blower speeds -- ie, they are tide to each other and can not be set manually by the user.

The ash pan is on the small side, could have been deeper. The stove will need to be cleaned out very 3 - 5 days, depends on the burn rate and the ash content of the pellets burned.

Mine has not had any problems with any brand of pellets that I have fed it.

Heat settings 4 and 5, the burn pot will glow 'cherry red', some burn pots in these stoves can warp.
The stove will eat pellets on the higher settings, 1.5 - 2.5 bags per day.

Heat settings 1 - 3, the stove runs quietly, I don't need to turn my TV's volume up to hear it over the stove unlike the stove that this one has replaced.

The three brick panels in the stove are very fragile and must be handled with care.

The clean out ports are easy to get at, as are all the other parts of the stove via the side panels that open out from the front.

The stoves controls that are mounted on the top at the back of the stove are in the ideal place, I prefer this location over those that are mounted on the side of the stove.

The stove also comes with a remote so that you can control the heat levels from another room (must have direct line of sight).

For a stove that's under $1600.00 after tax, it does what other higher priced stoves can do, but cheaper.

Would I buy this stove again ? Yes, it does what I need it to do, heat 1500sqf and more, and better than my oil pig furnace can.
 
Good review.....
 
Burn pots should not 'glow' however, if, the combustion air is coming in under the pot because the CA keeps the pot cool (relatively speaking). Most stoves are really gasification burners, that is, the actual oxidation of the fuel souce taks place 'above' the fuel bed, once the stove is operating and the fuel bed is established. Does it have a low grade stainless pot or a mild steel pot?
 
The pot is made of mild cheap steal.

The pot could have done with being made with thicker steal plates. Also, the section of the burn pot that as the rope gasket in it to stop air bypass, this needs to be looked at by the R&D department, a thick solid steal bar should have been used all the way around so that it sits flush on the burn bot cradle, that would then help with heat transfer away from the burn pot, as it is now, the pot has no way to dissipate the heat other than cold air coming up through the holes in the pot, this is one of the reasons that the pot can become warped on the back edge, this in turn now allows some pellets to fall behind the burn pot and not in it when they fall out of the chute.

I have already informed US Stove of this issue with the burn pot, and I am waiting for a replacement pot under warranty.
 
'Steal' is fine actually so long as the gage is substantial enough/ Steel comes in many alloys btw. Usually, you'll only find low grade stainless in true multifuel units to offset the corrosive effects of nitric acid when burning corn, but even then steel works.

Much easier and less costly to make it from steel than stainless because welding stainless is a skilled trade, Welding steel in a production enviroment, really isn't.
 
Makes you wonder if the stove is working correctly when set to the higher settings when you see this with the lights to that room turned off ....



For the pot to glow like this, the heat in the pot must be 580F - 650F !

But like I said, the stove throws out the heat into the room.
 

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Yeah, but that's how you get the 44,000 - 48,000 btu's out of the stove !
Yeah. I called us stove and they are really willing to make good on there screw ups. Win just are trying to figure something out that will work for us. But I still love this stove. I originally wanted an enviro empress In maroon. But I couldnt justify the price. Then Ifound this stove and I really like it so far
 
Today while taking down the fake brick and the steel plates to clean the flu passages the thought occured to me these side clean out plates really dont need to be taken off. With the back plates taken off I am vaccuming the rear of those plates anyway. Why screw with the factory gaskets on those plates if I have access to that area anyway. Thoughts gentlemen?
 
The small square ones on the sides are quick cleanouts / inspection ports, I use these every 2 days to see how much ash and other crap is there, it's handy as it saves doing a full clean unless needed. A full clean gets done every 7 days at the moment, might take it to 10 days and see how it goes.
 
Hi All. Entirely brand new to pellet stoves. Grew up with wood so this is just a strange new world for me.

Just bought this stove and had it installed over the weekend, was not expecting to go through the amount of pellets it's going through for the size of my house. Does this stove just eat pellets? Of course, could be user error, that I won't rule out either. I have a 900 sq foot ranch with a relatively open concept floor plan. Keeps the main rooms pretty warm, around 70; back rooms not so much (not surprised at that). I'm more concerned at the rate that it's eating through pellets.

First pellets I put in were junk from TSC just to see how it worked. Put a bag in at 2 in the afternoon and by 4am woke up freezing since the stove ran out of pellets and went out at some point before 4am. I figured I'd be able to get through a night on a bag of pellets with the stove on low. Just bought a few bags of Maine's to try out thinking a better quality pellet would last longer, put the bag in at 8 am and it's now close to 10 and I'll need to put another bag in or it will run out by midnight.
 
The hopper isn't huge on that stove. Check and top it off two or three times a day. On 1 or maybe 2 it shouldn't be too bad on pellets
 
Im also in a ranch. About 1200sq ft and it keeps me very warm. I usually bump it up to level 3 around 20 degrees or lower in which case it eats the pellets faster. Its a good stove though and it does have its bugs like anything else. Us stove customer service is wonderful. Get the number on speed dial cause you are going to be calling them a few times. Your fake bricks are going to start chipping in a few months and start to look very worn. Your burn pot probably will warp. That has happened to a few of us on here with this stove. Also make sure you clean it often because the burn pot is a bad design and really holds the ash. Keep in touch and if I find any tricks with the burn pot which im currently tinkering with ill let you know
 
This stove will chew a bag of pellets in 6 hours or less on heat setting 5. On heat setting 1 it will use 1 bag every 16 - 18 hours.

These are the feed rates per heat setting for the stove based on my findings, it all depends on the pellet size (length).

1-on 2 sec off 5 sec = 1.9 lb/hr +/- 5% (16 - 18 hours burn time)
2-on 3 sec off 3 sec = 3.4 lb/hr +/- 5% (12 - 14 hours burn time)
3-on 5 sec off 3 sec = 4.3 lb/hr +/- 5% (10 - 13 hours burn time)
4-on 7 sec off 3 sec = 4.8 lb/hr +/- 5% (7 - 9 hours burn time)
5-on 10 sec off 3 sec = 5.4 lb/hr +/- 5% (6 hours or less)

Lets say the BTU rating of 1 lbs of pellets is 8000 BTU's....

On heat setting 1 the stove uses 1.9 lbs per hour +/- 5%
(1.9 x 8000 = 15200 BTU's - heat loss @ 10% = 13680 BTU's per hour)

The stove is rated at 48000 BTU on max setting, I am still doing some tests here with the stove to work out the feed rates. I am thinking that the high setting is feeding over 5.6 lbs per hour, I think I have the other heat settings spot on.
 
Thanks all, much appreciated! Puts it into perspective a bit better now that I know what I'm in for.

Next stop is a sampling of different pellets before I get a ton. Thankfully there are a lot of places around here with a lot of, from what I'm reading, very good choices. It seems to like the Maine's I put in it this morning.

Very nice research of the feed rates, its helpful. I don't think I'll ever put this onto a 5. I'd heat myself out of the house with my dog running behind me. He's already boycotted the stove and disappeared to the cooler end of the house.
 
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