I have an englander stove and the feed rate goes from 1-9. I was wondering the highest setting I could safely go without any negative impact.
roundeye said:Actually the stove is way bigger than I need and I couldn't figure out why it wasn't warming up....I put the jumper back in the thermostat spot...I usually keep it on 2 or 3 just wondering if 5 or 6 would be too high
SmokeyTheBear said:Just remember that when running full open if the plumbing gets plugged things have been known to warp and crack.
Keep'em clean.
tjnamtiw said:SmokeyTheBear said:Just remember that when running full open if the plumbing gets plugged things have been known to warp and crack.
Keep'em clean.
Yep, Ye be correct, brewmeister! Read the manual and operate properly. Clean, clean, clean.
tchdngrnby said:I run my St.Croix Prescott EXL on high for 20-30 minutes each day as soon as I get home from work burn out those gummy's. I told the girlfriend I do it to warm up the house before she gets here. I guess I am knocking out two birds with one stone.....BRILLIANT!
save$ said:my stove manual advises us not to run on high for any length of time. I usually run it at 4.5, then 5 if real cold out, teens or less. I wonder how many Napoleon stoves are out there. I know hundreds were sold in this area.
Salty said:snip ... Course I was burning Inferno pellets which creates ice in the firebox but that's not happening this year.
... snip
tjnamtiw said:save$ said:my stove manual advises us not to run on high for any length of time. I usually run it at 4.5, then 5 if real cold out, teens or less. I wonder how many Napoleon stoves are out there. I know hundreds were sold in this area.
That, to me, says that they have a problem with their stoves! They are covering their butts. If you can't run it on high, how much damage are you doing at MEDIUM?
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