How To burn a longer fire/newbie help

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I am curious to how your overnight burn went? If you can, take pictures of your wood, stove, etc. We love pics, we may be able to point out a thing or 2. Like previously mentioned, no glowing stove or chimney..... check your chimney regularly

Hello Sir- Well after i "loaded" her up at atound 12 am EST by 1:45 am ii was basically all just coals left-- a very very fast burn I think , no? my Vermont Casting model 0044 (nice-sized unit)--but it IS old 1988 circa

I would love to post pics-- have a few in my cell phone- how to I post them to this board? thanks
 
Time will tell!

Did you load it up with the 4-6 inch splits or the 1-3's?

pen

I am curious to how your overnight burn went? If you can, take pictures of your wood, stove, etc. We love pics, we may be able to point out a thing or 2. Like previously mentioned, no glowing stove or chimney..... check your chimney regularly

I'd wait for earlier in the evening some night. Do as you know is fine for tonight.

It sounds to me that your splits are quite small, the 4-6 sounds more reasonable. In general, I like to keep my splits about the size that I can just comfortably grasp by the end and carry in one hand. This way they are not too big for the wife to handle if necessary, but large enough for decent burn times.
I am curious to how your overnight burn went? If you can, take pictures of your wood, stove, etc. We love pics, we may be able to point out a thing or 2. Like previously mentioned, no glowing stove or chimney..... check your chimney regularly

If you have a digital camera, you can take a few pics of the wood you are working with and make a post in the wood shed room. There are folks around there that can identify what you are working with for you.

pen

Hello Sir- Well after i "loaded" her up at atound 12 am EST by 1:45 am ii was basically all just coals left-- a very very fast burn I think , no? my Vermont Casting model 0044 (nice-sized unit)--but it IS old 1988 circa

I would love to post pics-- have a few in my cell phone- how to I post them to this board? thanks

get-attachment.aspx
I am curious to how your overnight burn went? If you can, take pictures of your wood, stove, etc. We love pics, we may be able to point out a thing or 2. Like previously mentioned, no glowing stove or chimney..... check your chimney regularly

Hello Sir- Well after i "loaded" her up at atound 12 am EST by 1:45 am ii was basically all just coals left-- a very very fast burn I think , no? my Vermont Casting model 0044 (nice-sized unit)--but it IS old 1988 circa

I would love to post pics-- have a few in my cell phone-
I am curious to how your overnight burn went? If you can, take pictures of your wood, stove, etc. We love pics, we may be able to point out a thing or 2. Like previously mentioned, no glowing stove or chimney..... check your chimney regularly
I'd wait for earlier in the evening some night. Do as you know is fine for tonight.

It sounds to me that your splits are quite small, the 4-6 sounds more reasonable. In general, I like to keep my splits about the size that I can just comfortably grasp by the end and carry in one hand. This way they are not too big for the wife to handle if necessary, but large enough for decent burn times.

If you have a digital camera, you can take a few pics of the wood you are working with and make a post in the wood shed room. There are folks around there that can identify what you are working with for you.

pen


Some of my wood prepped for tonight--did it print ok? thanks

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I am curious to how your overnight burn went? If you can, take pictures of your wood, stove, etc. We love pics, we may be able to point out a thing or 2. Like previously mentioned, no glowing stove or chimney..... check your chimney regularly

Some wood for tonight
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I have to wonder if it isn't a wood issue but more of an overall stove issue...if you have had the stove down to a low damper and the fire was still blazing could it possibly be a leaky gasket? I have a hearthstone heritage and last year was my 1st year burning and was getting poor results...changed the front side and ash door gaskets among other things and the get much better results now.
 
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I have to wonder if it isn't a wood issue but more of an overall stove issue...if you have had the stove down to a low damper and the fire was still blazing could it possibly be a leaky gasket? I have a hearthstone heritage and last year was my 1st year burning and was getting poor results...changed the front side and ash door gaskets among other things and the get much better results now.
Hello- Funny you should say that-- I DO have a gasket or two actually that needs attention- didn't think that would make such an impact--thanks for the tip/info-- how much better were your results (how did you quantify progress)
 
I am curious to how your overnight burn went? If you can, take pictures of your wood, stove, etc. We love pics, we may be able to point out a thing or 2. Like previously mentioned, no glowing stove or chimney..... check your chimney regularly
1/2 cord--320 pieces

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Hmmm, pictures aren't showing. I think too this may be a gasket issue.
 
Hello- Funny you should say that-- I DO have a gasket or two actually that needs attention- didn't think that would make such an impact--thanks for the tip/info-- how much better were your results (how did you quantify progress)

I went from burning about 6 full loads a day down to 3...you have to realize that if the gaskets aren't working properly there is additional air flow which is going to cause it to burn faster
 
Hmmm, pictures aren't showing. I think too this may be a gasket issue.
Hope this shows pics-- just a few i had laying in my cellphone camera- will add more
 

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I went from burning about 6 full loads a day down to 3...you have to realize that if the gaskets aren't working properly there is additional air flow which is going to cause it to burn faster

Thanks for the update---- my unit is so old(i guess it's considered old) that I cannot geet much heat from it unless it is roaring and stoked often.. any thoughts?
 
I am going to agree with the others.
Let your stove go until it is down to just a small amount of coals, rake them forward, then pack as much wood as you can into the stove, open up all of your air controls and damper, let it roar until its about 650 then start cutting it back.
I would also suggest much larger pieces of wood, no need to split it so small.
Use your little pieces to fill in the gaps when you pack the stove full and tight.
Good luck.
 
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