NorMi
Member
This should never be possible on a mass air flow compensated stove if one were to be designed - the idea is to make the user settings, insofar as there are any, correspond at all times to true, known mass air flow rates. Draft compensation integration into the intake throttle settings would work with stove differential pressure feedback as one of several inputs that would deliver a single target airflow solution, so the EPA test rig draft and the 40' chimney in 80 mph winds should always achieve the same mass air flow rate and chamber residence times in all realistic conditions, perfectly matching the manufacturer's designed airflow range(s) for any given install (so long as it's not experiencing problems like flow reversion/backdraft/etc).And when you increase the range of operation so it's wide enough to work in the real world, you can no longer get your EPA certification because the stove turns down too low for the test setup.
This would require lower and more precise real-time achievable minimum open intake area on the stove, but would only be able to be activated automatically in practice when the pressure compensation allows the throttle to drop that low. It would be easiest to accomplish repeatably over the long term with electronic control which would be my preference, but a combination of mechanical pressure and thermal compensators carefully calibrated for mass air flow should be theoretically realistic as well - after all it's about as complicated as carburetors or automatic chokes, which can work pretty darn well. Separate controls for primary and secondary air pathways would not be desirable, that would be like a car with two gas pedals and two drivers.
The main problem is it costs far more to develop and manufacture something like that than it does to print a line calling out a narrow range of allowable install parameters in the manual. If you are min-maxing for profit, making something that passes the test and serves the majority audience will get the largest and fastest returns... and get more dampers installed in the field. 🤷♂️