wood spliter said:I think mine cools the fire box also so I turn it off at the start. Withe that said if your fire box is cooler it should increase the burn time..?? Kind of a thought.
If the blower takes the stove out of the sweet spot by cooling it too much, the stove's efficiency could drop, resulting in less heat per cord. Of course YMMV.mellow said:Im stuck on this one, one part of me says that running the fan on high will take more btu's from the stove requiring it to be burned hotter to produce the heat, other part says its going to produce the heat no matter what the fan speed is, your going to get really hot air on low or cooler hot air on high.
LLigetfa said:If the blower takes the stove out of the sweet spot by cooling it too much, the stove's efficiency could drop, resulting in less heat per cord. Of course YMMV.mellow said:Im stuck on this one, one part of me says that running the fan on high will take more btu's from the stove requiring it to be burned hotter to produce the heat, other part says its going to produce the heat no matter what the fan speed is, your going to get really hot air on low or cooler hot air on high.
I'm not sure if my air intake is thermostatically controlled. I am going to check today.jharkin said:wood spliter said:I think mine cools the fire box also so I turn it off at the start. Withe that said if your fire box is cooler it should increase the burn time..?? Kind of a thought.
If you have a thermostatically controlled air intake, no. When the blower cools off the firebox the thermostat will respond by opening up the air to burn faster and try to maintain the set temperature.
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