Highest stove pipe probe thermometer temp.?

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Funny, when I said this the other day I had a response saying " how can you over load/over fire your stove?" eluding that I was an idiot.
I hit just over 1300 my 3rd fire, with ash and pallet wood, dumb rookie mistake. I was terrified. Shut the air down, dumped flour in the firebox (I had nothing in the ash bucket yet) and ran out of my house to check the chimney as I screamed past my husband what was going on. Because the stove and chimney was so new, and we had painted shrouds throughout the house with the double wall inside, it STUNK in my house for hours. I sat with a flash light watching the flue probe go down, looking for anything glowing (never happened) i didn't light the stove again until my installers came out to inspect everything, they got a chuckle out of the flour in the firebox but all ended up being ok. Now I hit 1,000 every now and then but I don't reach for the flour, I just damper down and wait it out, a few minutes it calms down and so do I.



Here is your push, your stovetop temp is good to know if your cooking on it, knowing what flying through your chimney gives you a whole other layer of perspective and comfort. DO IT and post a photo or I will continue to pester you until you do ;)

For the record . . . putting flour on a fire is generally not a good idea . . . if applied incorrectly it can not only catch on fire, but can actually explode . . . if just dumped on to a fire it will typically put out a fire simply by cutting it off from the oxygen supply . . . but a far better material to use would have been baking soda. Just a FYI.

Incidentally . . . these flour dust explosions most often occur in mills and not homes though . . .



http://lacrossetribune.com/newsupda...cle_f0c46c39-58c5-5025-8ef9-b16f35e3dc0d.html
 
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Oh yeah . . . to answer the original question . . . a little bit north of 900 degrees F with a probe thermo . . . caused by leaving the air control open and showering . . . brushing my teeth . . . etc.
 
Fresh load of very dry kindling and some smallish chunks mostly maple and birch in a cold stove, I lit it, left air open, door closed, and walked away - it went from zero to @1000 in the time it took to brew a coffee. Not sure how accurate the Osburn flue probes are but assuming they're not too far off, then I'd say 1000 degrees is my 'personal best" (best fubar, that is...)
 
With my digital temp probe (PID controller and a 2000F temp probe)... 18" above the stove, measuring approx. center of flue temps... You can very quickly get up over 1000F, especially with smaller splits and dry wood. I say quickly, I mean under a minute, if you've got a coal bed already.

My personal best... north of 1300F. I had the alarm set to go at 1200F, and I think by the time I got across the kitchen and down the stairs, the stove was approaching 1400F... but outer surface temps on the single wall flue pipe were still in the "normal" range, as the magnetic thermometer hadn't adjusted quickly enough (and flue surface temps are always slow to respond due to pipe flow characteristics.)

I've now got the alarm set for 1100F.
 
For the record . . . putting floor on a fire is generally not a good idea . . . if applied incorrectly it can not only catch on fire, but can actually explode . . . if just dumped on to a fire it will typically put out a fire simply by cutting it off from the oxygen supply . . . but a far better material to use would have been baking soda. Just a FYI.

Incidentally . . . these flour dust explosions most often occur in mills and not homes though . . .



http://lacrossetribune.com/newsupda...cle_f0c46c39-58c5-5025-8ef9-b16f35e3dc0d.html


Yes, I am aware but that was all I had, it was a whole 5 lb bag sliced open and dumped, to smother the fire,but I would not recommend doing it ever again, it was just a knee jerk panic reaction on my 2nd day with my stove :(
 
I think you guys are worring about nothing, a spike once in a while at those temps is nothing to worry about.
 
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I think you guys are worring about nothing, a spike once in a while at those temps is nothing to worry about.

Interesting point - I guess the flip side of the discussion is that you can get so worried about the high temps that you never really let your stove run hot enough, and get more accumulated crap in the flue...?

For me the scary part of the 1000+ deg spike was mostly that I wasn't paying attention and it was really fast. I think the pipe can stand up to twice that heat (short duration) but still I was a bit careless. Good learning experience.
 
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I don't know what my stovepipe temp was at the time since I don't have a pipe thermometer, but I once hit 2000 F on the catalyst during a runaway 2 years ago. Entire upper fire back inside the firebox was orange. Scary.
 
if i let probe hit 1300 plus i see my double wall liner start to glow right at my block off plate and i hear the pipe make noise. Scares me if I ever let that happen so I just dont leave it any more until i turn down the air
 
i hit 600 on the single wall the other day. support box was smoking.. i shut the air down and closed the damper an you could instantly hear the metal shrinking.. sounded like someone throwing handfuls of BB's in there... Its still under investigation. some other members suggested the installer may have left some debris in there. either way i need it checked. also want to look into a probe...
 
i hit 600 on the single wall the other day. support box was smoking.. i shut the air down and closed the damper an you could instantly hear the metal shrinking.. sounded like someone throwing handfuls of BB's in there... Its still under investigation. some other members suggested the installer may have left some debris in there. either way i need it checked. also want to look into a probe...
600 aint nothing, hit that several times a week with no smell or smoking, if new install did they leave a sticker some where?
 
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Oldspark - negative, no sticker but i did contact the installer and he chuckled and said same as you.. nothing to worry about at 600 its 900 he'd be concerned with. i mentioned this on another thread, i referred to the installer as "picasso" cause I swear he used a can of black spray paint to finish out the support box after installation. i suspect thats where the extra smoke came from. factory support boxes are most likely pre cured or even oven cured while the spray paint would leave some need for heat curing. still going into the support box to investigate. have to ya know...
 
I did it. I installed the probe thermometer...another toy to play with.

So far, the probe is pretty consistently three times the exterior magnetic thermometer.

I have ICC ultrablack.

I paint my pipe grey to match my Woodstock stove, every time I take it apart, if and where it gets scratched. No big deal when I first use the stove after. A slight smell, but no smoke or anything of concern.
 
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I did it. I installed the probe thermometer...another toy to play with.

So far, the probe is pretty consistently three times the exterior magnetic thermometer.

I have ICC ultrablack.

I paint my pipe grey to match my Woodstock stove, every time I take it apart, if and where it gets scratched. No big deal when I first use the stove after. A slight smell, but no smoke or anything of concern.
Hey rideau, post a picture. I want to see the grey Woodstock and stove pipe
 
Hey rideau, post a picture. I want to see the grey Woodstock and stove pipe
Left my camera at the other house. Will try to find a shot in my photo archive. If I do, I'll post it.

Just read the ICC manual, which states ICC pipe is safe at continuous 1200F operation, which makes me feel very safe. They don't recommend this temp for optimal burning.....much lower, don't remember if it is 500 or 600 as the max for best burning. Will check again.
 
rideau - just curious - is your entire chimney also ICC product? I think they make a 1" SS chimney ?
 
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