Burn times idea for overnight burns

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Yeah I hope nothing else comes up for a long while.

Thats good to hear. Lot of effort goes into picking and installing a stove, it's good it's working for you. Colder weather moved in here, that and I'm home so I can burn round the clock. Stove has never been happier.
 
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Here's a typical burn for me.
Stove- Regency F2400, Chimney- 20 ft 6"SS, Wood- Lodgepole pine.

Loaded up for the night (note wood is loaded North/South)
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The temperature continued to rise to about 600 F after the wood was loaded, then the draft was closed completely and time shot was taken before going to bed.
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The night time temp outside was around 30 F (-1 C)

Gone to sleep ZZZZZZZZZZZZzzzzzzzzzz

Next morning
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Temperature in the stove room was over 80 F
Lots of coals to start another fire, but house was plenty warm so we just open the draft and let the coals burn out.
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This was a typical overnight burn, if I wanted a longer burn I would let the initial fire burn hotter and more completely, then rake the coals forward and load the wood East/West. That will often give me another 2-3 hours till I need to reload, using the same wood.
 
No pics...my current times sound like they suck but it's more of a wood "issue". We're still burning box elder we had to move for an outside project so it's got to get gone anyway. Splits are mostly small so they burn through fast. Usually load @ 9/10 pm and reload at 2/3am with a hot coals restart. I don't turn on the light for the middle of the night reload so I can't give stove top temps.
 
Good morning everyone. As I'am sitting reading post about burn times, heat out put,etc. I have a idea to help others out with burn times we get overnight.
To start, take a picture of what coals you have left in the stove. Load up the stove as you would for a overnighter and what time you filled it up and another picture. If you know what kind of wood you have that would be great also. Do what you normally do for an over nighter. I know outside temps, winds and all the other facts will play in. For the morning reload, take picture of the coals, check what time it is. After this, post all you info,what kind of stove, burn time, what kind of wood and othe info that might help.This should help others on how some of us get long burn times over night or not. I know it's alot of work but it should be neat to see how other do their overnight burns. Frank
Hey Fespo, you started this thread, where's you pictures???
 
Great idea, i will report tonight when i get home. On a full load of locust and maple, i normally get a decent 10 hours, 8 depending on outside variables.
 
no pics here either, but fwiw I found the king of uglies while digging around in one pallet / stack this past weekend - great big gnarly knotted chunk of yellow birch probably about 3 years old - buried down in the middle of a pallet. I could see the remnants of my attempts to break this thing apart with the manual log splitter (10 ton) before giving up on it. That was a couple of years ago. After a bit of eyeballing and scratching my head (would it fit?) I loaded it onto a hot bed of coals sometime shortly after 1:00 a.m. or so. It just cleared the brick on either side of the firebox, with a couple inches to spare between the top of the knot and the tubes. I left the air open for a while, it was rolling along nicely, then started to shut it down until the primary air was about 95% closed - @ 2:00. Nothing but more coals @ 9:00 a.m. That was one tough chunk of wood, more than my splitter could handle, but I got my revenge on new years eve.... :p
 
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DO all of you have to keep your stoves going 24/7 to maintain heat? If temps are around 35 or more, i sometimes have to delay filling the stove until the evening hours. I still get a relight after 24 hours as the stove is still 100-200 top temp.
 
DO all of you have to keep your stoves going 24/7 to maintain heat? If temps are around 35 or more, i sometimes have to delay filling the stove until the evening hours. I still get a relight after 24 hours as the stove is still 100-200 top temp.
I sometimes have to do like you as well but the stove is still warm so it ant much trouble at all getting back going as a cold start is.
 
DO all of you have to keep your stoves going 24/7 to maintain heat? If temps are around 35 or more, i sometimes have to delay filling the stove until the evening hours. I still get a relight after 24 hours as the stove is still 100-200 top temp.
I do.

It's more of a matter of how many stoves I need to run. My heat loss is quite high and this old house will never be as efficient as a modern home. Over the next five years it will be interesting to see how additional insulation, better windows, and new doors effect the heat output and burn times of the stoves.
 
I put 2 large oak splits on a bed of coals in the revere last night at 10 ,room was 73, got up at six and the room was 67.5.The coals were still more or less the shape of the splits.
BB, I installed new vinyl dual glazed windows in the house(1960 log cabin) made a real difference in keeping the heat IN the place overnight
 
I do.
It's more of a matter of how many stoves I need to run. My heat loss is quite high and this old house will never be as efficient as a modern home. Over the next five years it will be interesting to see how additional insulation, better windows, and new doors effect the heat output and burn times of the stoves.
I only have 1 stove, but 3 floors so its a challenge to get that back bedroom on the third floor warm.
I still have a few walls with zero insulation in this 100 Yr old house.Every thing i do here insulation wise was well worth the effort and has a positive effect on the houses ability to retain heat. Its a good thing my harman puts out every bit of its rated capacity of 75000 BTUs as thats the only thing running since Xmas and its about 25 outside.
 
I put 2 large oak splits on a bed of coals in the revere last night at 10 ,room was 73, got up at six and the room was 67.5.The coals were still more or less the shape of the splits.
BB, I installed new vinyl dual glazed windows in the house(1960 log cabin) made a real difference in keeping the heat IN the place overnight
Yeah, I know new windows and doors will make a big difference. But the $20-40k needed to replace all the windows and doors would also make a big difference in my bank account... negatively speaking. The changes will happen. Just not in the short term. It will take about five years to make it all happen.
 
I think my back door is leaking a lot of air.:(
 
I think my back door is leaking a lot of air.:(
Cheer up. I have seven doors leaking air.

Oh, I've sealed them up as best as I can. Weather stripping, insulation tape, caulking, etc. But they all still leak somewhat. New doors are the answer.
 
Cheer up. I have seven doors leaking air.

Oh, I've sealed them up as best as I can. Weather stripping, insulation tape, caulking, etc. But they all still leak somewhat. New doors are the answer.
That is a lot of doors no wonder you have to keep more then one stove going.
 
As promised earlier, i came home and did a reload on coals from earlier this am. The stove was about 250 and some coals left from a load of maple and locust. Just loaded the stove with the same thing now plus a few small splits of birch. It got pretty warm pretty fast. I was chocking the air down as needed. Right now she is cruising at 600. Last picture should have been first on the order but yall get the idea.
Morning Follow up
Woke up this morning at 6:30 and the stove top was still at 375-400 and had a nice bed of coals and some solids forwards the back wall of the stove, that locust sure does burn nicely. Loaded the stove again and took right off. Off to the races at 650 in no time. by the way its 3 degrees out and 75 around the house. both stoves going.
 

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This is a much better than average performanceand I don't have good pics but I had to share...

Last night I reloaded about 9pm. It was 20 out, 74 in and I had a lot of coals, at least 3in as the stove was still hot. I packed it full of heavy stuff - oak and maybe some hard maple, 5 or 6 big 20in splits with one shorty on top to fill within 1/2in of griddle. At a half hour had it shut down and cruising at 450 griddle/1150 cat temp on fully closed air. Stove room at 76.

This morning at 6:30 its 22 out and 71 in stove room. Inside temp doesn't count because the central heat had kicked on overnight. But more important, stove is at 375 griddle/700 cat. Usually at this time I reload, but this time I opened the air and the temps shot up to 550 griddle/1300 cat burning off what's left of last nights load. I could probably get another 2 hours of usable heat!

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On Weds. this week I made it 15 hours between reloads in the 30 and I still had a stove top that was at 280 degrees. I've been tinkering quite a bit with how it's loaded, maximizing the load size, minimizing the air flow and watching it heat up like a hawk and just having some patience with it. It's really starting to pay off.

It might take a little more human input other than just opening the door, stuffing some wood in it and letting it burn but to me it's been well worth. Sorry, no pics as I'm usually gone all day (12 hours) for work and it never crosses my mind once I get home. If I get into a big burn this weekend I'll try and take some pics. I like the pics, it has shown me one thing and that is I think I can leave my splits bigger now that I have this stove. Most of you guys have at least one or 2 monster sized splits in your overnight loads. I currently don't have any that big :(.
 
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