So I replaced an old Kodiack 2 door wood stove this morning. It worked very well but it had a crack on teh side and the steel flat stock below the flute inside was near gone.
Anyway i chose the summers heat england 2200 wood stove. Managed to get it off the truck and in the house with the help of the little woman. Everything went flawless.
So I fire it up and burn it low and slow, rince and repeat again. But it is not like the old one at all. I know my wood isnt properly seasoned, I had a triaxle of logs delivered in the spring and cut and split them early summer. They were suppose to be last falls timer and some were very dry while others were not.
Anyway, Im noticing its harder to get a good even burn going. While trying different settings and such, I have accumulated about 6 inches of coals. The top baffles are working depending on how hot I burn it, Sometimes I get them cherry. (not sure if that is good).
With the old stove I piled the wood in and let it go checking it every couple hours. It seems Im babysitting this new one and havent found that sweet spot.
So my question right now is this. With the new stove should I only put 3-4 18 inch pieces of wood in it and burn em to ash or do I keep the firebrick full of wood? With the llarge pile of coals I currently have, is it safe to assume just pull the vent out and burn them down before I put more wood in it? Also I never heard of the north south east west positioning of wood prior to getting on this forum. That a fact or fiction?
My thermometer reads 300-350 resting on top and the flu temp is about the same right now.
If anyone has some input I would appreciate it and I would greatly appreciate some "hands on" experiance from anyone who has this stove.
Im used to fill it and forget it of the old style. Im concerned I cannot do that with the new stove.
Model 50-snc30lc
(no blower, figured it was a waste of money??)
Thanks
Anyway i chose the summers heat england 2200 wood stove. Managed to get it off the truck and in the house with the help of the little woman. Everything went flawless.
So I fire it up and burn it low and slow, rince and repeat again. But it is not like the old one at all. I know my wood isnt properly seasoned, I had a triaxle of logs delivered in the spring and cut and split them early summer. They were suppose to be last falls timer and some were very dry while others were not.
Anyway, Im noticing its harder to get a good even burn going. While trying different settings and such, I have accumulated about 6 inches of coals. The top baffles are working depending on how hot I burn it, Sometimes I get them cherry. (not sure if that is good).
With the old stove I piled the wood in and let it go checking it every couple hours. It seems Im babysitting this new one and havent found that sweet spot.
So my question right now is this. With the new stove should I only put 3-4 18 inch pieces of wood in it and burn em to ash or do I keep the firebrick full of wood? With the llarge pile of coals I currently have, is it safe to assume just pull the vent out and burn them down before I put more wood in it? Also I never heard of the north south east west positioning of wood prior to getting on this forum. That a fact or fiction?
My thermometer reads 300-350 resting on top and the flu temp is about the same right now.
If anyone has some input I would appreciate it and I would greatly appreciate some "hands on" experiance from anyone who has this stove.
Im used to fill it and forget it of the old style. Im concerned I cannot do that with the new stove.
Model 50-snc30lc
(no blower, figured it was a waste of money??)
Thanks