Had a hard time getting the stove going

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HDRock

Minister of Fire
Oct 25, 2012
2,239
Grand Blanc, Mi
It got down to 60 out I got cold ,windows open anyway, good time to get some practice on the new stove.
Do ya think it's just cuz of the temp ?
Got it cruising at 520 ST temp now, box is little under half full
Wow moving the air a little makes a big difference
FYI first EPA stove
 
Assuming you have good dry kindling, when it drops below 50F it will start easier.
 
Assuming you have good dry kindling, when it drops below 50F it will start easier.
Thanks
I am just a little worried about the draft , cuz ,I have 8" chim ,have 6" straight up to ceiling box though.
Going to check out a piece of chim pipe from CL , I think is same brand, so if need be I can add some
If it is same and I don't need it , it won't hurt to have, for $25
 
Is your overall chimney height above the minimum in the stove manual? (typically 13-16ft)


I second Begreen's thoughts - a small change in outdoor temps can make a big difference in draft, and its typical that we get a lot of poor draft posts each fall as people start lighting up in mild weather. By mid winter all the issues disappear :) I know for my setup, if I try to light up at 50F I will get smoke in the house anytime I open the door. At 40F its starts to work halfway decent. At 30F that thing will suck your gloves up the stack if you are not careful (kidding - but you get the idea)
 
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It got down to 60 out I got cold ,windows open anyway, good time to get some practice on the new stove.
Do ya think it's just cuz of the temp ?
Got it cruising at 520 ST temp now, box is little under half full
Wow moving the air a little makes a big difference
FYI first EPA stove

The new stoves dont start quite as easy as the old ones either besides the warm temp so a little learning curve might be in store, for the most part I have to have the door cracked for a few minutes when I start a fire from scratch.
 
Is your overall chimney height above the minimum in the stove manual? (typically 13-16ft)


I second Begreen's thoughts - a small change in outdoor temps can make a big difference in draft, and its typical that we get a lot of poor draft posts each fall as people start lighting up in mild weather. By mid winter all the issues disappear :) I know for my setup, if I try to light up at 50F I will get smoke in the house anytime I open the door. At 40F its starts to work halfway decent. At 30F that thing will suck your gloves up the stack if you are not careful (kidding - but you get the idea)
Chimney is,10/2, 15' stove top to cap.
 
Chimney is,10/2, 15' stove top to cap.
I remember this spring when it was warming up, it was much trickier to get the 1750 drafting when it was over 50F. For probably the same reason, I had more trouble with smoke coming into the room when I would open the door to feed the fire.

The only thing that seemed to help was just building a smaller, hot fire (smaller, really dry splits) toward the back of the fire box. I think that's probably good practice whenever I light the stove, but it seems to be more important to pay attention to those details when the temperature differential is smaller.

I hope you are enjoying your new stove!
 
I remember this spring when it was warming up, it was much trickier to get the 1750 drafting when it was over 50F. For probably the same reason, I had more trouble with smoke coming into the room when I would open the door to feed the fire.

The only thing that seemed to help was just building a smaller, hot fire (smaller, really dry splits) toward the back of the fire box. I think that's probably good practice whenever I light the stove, but it seems to be more important to pay attention to those details when the temperature differential is smaller.

I hope you are enjoying your new stove!

Good point, getting the fire as hot as possible as quickly as you can with the right type of splits will help a lot.
 
Good point, getting the fire as hot as possible as quickly as you can with the right type of splits will help a lot.

This is especially important in warmer temps, Also as your flue warms up you will have easier time getting a draft. I think I have about 20ft of flue, Mine like yours is 8". so it leaves the stove 6" up to the support box when it goes to 8". I Had similar draft issues during shoulder season last year with 13ft of stack height to collar, so I added a 7ft section.
 
Ditto. The shorter of my two stove chimneys won't draft well anytime it's much over 40F.
 
It got down to 60 out I got cold ,windows open anyway, good time to get some practice on the new stove.
Do ya think it's just cuz of the temp ?
Got it cruising at 520 ST temp now, box is little under half full
Wow moving the air a little makes a big difference
FYI first EPA stove

Come on HD! Were you getting bored and had to light a fire? If you must, we will be getting into the 40's in a couple days. For sure you won't get much drafting at 60 degrees outdoors. Shoot, it was no doubt warmer than that indoors. Difficult to get a draft in that.
 
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100, 60, 50, 30, 0 degrees. The mating call of the first time EPA stove owner after burning in a pre-EPA stove. "This damn thing won't burn right. Hard to get started.". We average five of those a season. Learning curve coming up. Don't feel alone.

But it is the first time it has come up in the first week of September. ;lol
 
100, 60, 50, 30, 0 degrees. The mating call of the first time EPA stove owner after burning in a pre-EPA stove. "This damn thing won't burn right. Hard to get started.". We average five of those a season. Learning curve coming up. Don't feel alone.

But it is the first time it has come up in the first week of September. ;lol
I think I will get it down fairly quick once It's actually cold enough to burn ;)
Im still using the AC!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Not that warm here 69 right now
 
I think I will get it down fairly quick once It's actually cold enough to burn


I and everyone else here thought so too....... ;em
 
Common MAN! your jumping the gun! ;)
 
I absolutely admit that I looked at the dry splits stacked behind the clean, clean glass of my stove in the chilly morning and thought about touching her off to warm the place up.

It will be colder soon enough, but I do miss burning wood in that stove!
 
LOL Had the windows open sun went down, got a chill, thought about lighting up... looked at thermostat, still 70 degrees inside My bet is 2-3 weeks. No need to jump the gun as we will be at this for the next 6 months
 
LOL Had the windows open sun went down, got a chill, thought about lighting up... looked at thermostat, still 70 degrees inside My bet is 2-3 weeks. No need to jump the gun as we will be at this for the next 6 months
I absolutely agree. It was the temptation I had to resist at the moment!

You folks who have been at this for awhile may be a little more tempered than us newbies. :)
 
No need to jump the gun as we will be at this for the next 6 months
I carry six large loads of wood up from the basement entrance and thru the house every day, all winter long, feeding these two big stoves. While it's fun to light them up the first time each fall, I found I was getting real tired of it by the end of February, last year.
 
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