Is this a good deal? The guy has it in storage. It is an hour and a half drive from my house. Pictures look good. Could I talk him down?
Is that a big puncture/gouge behind the cat, or a spot of soot and a spiderweb?
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That's where one of the mounting stud comes through the combustor scoop, and the "spider web" is the clip pin that holds the scoop up. You can see the far one better in the second pic. Check the bypass frame for warping, which would be a sign of over-firing, but it would have to be extreme. You might play dumb and ask him to describe in detail how he starts a new load and gets the stove cruising once it is up to temp. Ask what air settings he uses to burn in the load..'4' is wide open air and I never have run my stoves for long there, I was cutting air to 3 or less almost immediately. Now, his air settings may be a bit higher if he was running it on a short stack, like 13'. My Woodstocks were/are run on 16', rear-vented. I want lively flame in the box, not a blast furnace pouring heat into the bypass frame and the liner. I think roaring fires are harder on the seam cement and may loosen it, causing air leaks. Carefully look at the seams..air leaks will show as a light-colored area running along side of the cement.I can see it as a puncture and a crack, or a spot of dirt and a dangling spiderweb. The picture isn't good enough to be sure about either one.
I just brush the screen when the stove is cool, with an old toothbrush, leaving the screen in place.screen looks like it needs a cleaning, but nothing looks out of place to me.
I just brush the screen when the stove is cool, with an old toothbrush, leaving the screen in place.
Yeah, that's real easy as well. Reminds me, maybe I should do that soon. But the screen seems to catch most of the ash, and I've gotten away with just brushing the cat at the end of the season.Good tip. Your wrist must be more flexible that mine to get the front! Normally I give the cat a brushing too when I pull the screen. I actually just did it on Monday.
I would think that if you stay away from roaring fires in the box (overfire territory, not just burning at a normal high-output rate,) the cemented seams should hold up well over the long run. I'm sure that any seamed stove, be it stone or cast iron, gasketed or cemented, will eventually benefit from a rebuild at some point. My SIL bought her Fireview used, and I had to patch some seam leaks, which were an issue on her 21' chimney (the Woodstock cement is great stuff BTW.) That stove had definitely been overfired, as evidenced by the warped cast iron combustor scoop. The bypass frame was OK. I'm not a fan of pushing any stove hard, be it cast, stone or plate steel. If you need a bigger stove, and you can't get one, or fit one, that's a problem in my book and I wouldn't expect the stove to last as long.How often do these Woodstocks need rebuilt because of hot fires and seams leaking?
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