Condensation on inside of hopper lid?

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Lucerry

Member
Nov 29, 2012
27
Central Maine
I have a Harman Accentra, and tonight when I got home I noticed two problems.

1) The top of the stove was VERY hot. Like, can't even put my hand on it hot. Usually it's warm, sometimes hot, but I've never felt it this hot before. The stove was just about out of pellets (not completely-flame was still going and no flashing sensors yet). So I added a new bag of pellets...and that led to problem #....

2) After about 20 min. I checked to see how things were, and that's when I noticed the condensation that had formed on the inside of the hopper lid. I've never seen that before, and a number of google searches and forum searches turned up nothing. I wiped it dry, and it formed again.

I should mention that when I first got home there was an odd smell...almost like something was burning too hot. That smell has continued throughout.

I turned it off and am awaiting cool down so I can thoroughly clean it, but was so perplexed by these two (three? the smell?) issues, that I was hoping someone might have some insight.

Of course this happens on the coldest night of the year so far, with temps tomorrow only into the mid 20's!

Thanks......
 
Had the pellets been inside the stove room for at least a day or so?

Sometimes pellets that are cold when placed in a hot hooper (likely due to the lack of a pellet heat sink) will have a bit of extra moisture that will be driven off and then condense on the colder metal surface which would likely be the under side of the lid.

It is also possible that that condensate is other than just water from the pellets but from the pellet fire (several things including water can be part of that) it is possible for that to happen if the pellet level is too low and there is a vacuum in the hooper this allows combustion byproducts to enter the hopper via the slider in the bottom of the hopper when it opens to feed more pellets to the auger.

On a few models this was what lead to the so called gummy stove issue.
.
You might want to talk to your dealer about what happened.
 
Thanks for the quick response.

The pellets had been inside the stove room for awhile. We stack up 10 bags at a time or so in the room, and this bag was #5 out of those 10.

The stove was in the house when we purchased it, so I don't have a dealer, per say, but will check with someone tomorrow about it.

Do you think it's safe to start up again and burn overnight?
 
How long have you owned the house? How much have you burned (total)? And when was the last time the entire unit was cleaned? Along with the ESP?
 
If you get that stove including and especially the ESP cleaned up I'd feel safe restarting it.

You have to remember I have no way of knowing how well you clean a stove.

A good number of us that hangout here are quite anal about keeping our stoves clean so this would be considered a leap of faith on my part..
 
This is our third winter in the house, and have burned about 8 ton over the past 2 winters, and the start of this one. We never turn on the oil furnace, unless we are going away, then that gets set at 50.

I clean the whole stove myself about every 2-3 weeks. It was due for a full cleaning soon, and that's what I just finished doing. There was a lot of whiter colored buildup on the back of the heat exchanges, which was the only thing I could find that looked any different than usual.

What are your suggestions for fully cleaning the ESP? I vacuumed out the vent area and got it as clean as I think I can.....

Just restarted and have a flame going again. Now going to wait awhile and see if the condensation reappears.
 
Oh, and I don't think there are any leaks. The pellets have been in the same room as the stove for 2 weeks now. (Before that our basement-so not freezing). The stove is not new-at least 5 years old. And yes, we have a CO detector! Thanks for your help and suggestions!
 
Were the pellets you're using stored outside at the store before you bought them? I have to believe condensation meens wet pellets. My stove is a different breed of harman and the top of it gets REAL hot ( I cook on it in the coldest months) just my.02
 
You can remove the ESP and wipe it off with a slightly damp cloth or use a toothbrush on it, be careful not to damage it.

ETA: You might want to also clean the vent system.
 
Is this the Accentra free stander or the insert?

Eric
 
I would check to see if your stove has the cross-over tube installed. My stove was the newer feed motor (direct drive) but prior to Harman installing the cross-over tube. I developed the gummy stove syndrome and had to have the stove thoroughly cleaned and the cross-over tube installed.
The stove has been running great since.:)

How does all this relate you might ask? During the period leading up to discovering I had a gummy stove, I kept noticing moisture/condensation on the underside of the hopper lid along with smoke in the hopper. I don't know if the gummy stove condition created the moisture or the moisture accelerated the gummy stove syndrome.

Something to check into.
 
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or uses a computer

Hey I covered it all including the gummy stove possibility and I've likely been using a 'puter far longer than most of the folks on here.

Way back in the days the memory was actually magnetic non volatile core memory and people got useful work done with very little of that expensive memory. Microsoft wouldn't even be able to fit their smallest Windows routine into such a machine.

I rest my case and go upstairs for coffee now.
 
Were the pellets you're using stored outside at the store before you bought them? I have to believe condensation meens wet pellets. My stove is a different breed of harman and the top of it gets REAL hot ( I cook on it in the coldest months) just my.02

I don't think it's the pellets, simply because I've been burning from this same pallet for a couple weeks now and haven't had this problem.
 
So now I've come to the conclusion that perhaps the distribution fan isn't working properly. The thing is pumping out heat, but I haven't heard the fan turn on for quite awhile now, and the room temperature isn't going up at all. So I think it's burning right, etc, just not pushing the hot air out of it's system and into the room. Would that make sense? I now have the back of the stove off and am trying to give it a good cleaning, including the fans, etc.
 
put the feed adjuster knob to test...can you now feel the fan blowing out the front?
 
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You still need to get the stove checked for gummy stove syndrome because it can cause burn issues.

Do what Delta-T or Eric ask you to do. Both of these guys service Harman products.
 
if the distribution blower isn't working, I'd expect to see some condensation as the heat starts to work through the unit towards the hopper. On the up side, driving that 5% of moisture out of the pellets should increase the total energy available:)
 
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The dust bunnies could have infested the convection fan it may be a spinning but can't get no air to send through the plumbing.
 
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the one kind of bunny that isn't cute and cuddly.....sneaky sneaky.
 
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