Huh... Darren, we also have an old farmhouse. Built in 1789. I'm in western ma, and our temp went down to 32 as well. Where are you?Ladt night temps outside dropped just to freezing. On the lowest setting it kept the house almost too hot. There are 6 settings on this stove. Looking forward to testing it on some colder days. Amazingly enough the heat convected through the house quite well without fans. We have an old 2 story farmhouse. The downstairs is quite open with 2 stairwells going upstairs, one at each end of the house. I've already bought two fans to push the heat upstairs but if last night was any indication I might not need them.
Yes...I've cleaned twice now...just because lol. Just take the flat cover off inside the front grill and shove the provided cleaning rod down through. Piece of advice, go all the way to the bottom into the clean out chamber. As the brush fits very tight don't try to change direction part way down. A twist while your pushing the rod down through will help. There's 8 heat tubes in there.
Then I just vacuum. They provide a long handled scrapper to pull the ash out with but that may scratch the metal giving a place for ash to adhere to. I dunno, I figure the smoother the metal stays the better.
See, now I found the hardwood didn't burn so well in mine. Lazy flame and had to turn heat setting up to 3 instead of 2. Although even at 3 they seemed to last just as long as softwood on 2. I'm going to try mixing 2 bags softwood with 1 bag hardwood and see what that does. Maybe get the heat of the softwood with a little added longevity of the hardwood. Who knows what will happen but I'm going to find out.
Friend of mine has the same stove. He claims he mixes 2 milk pitchers of whole corn with 1 bag of softwood pellets and gets alot more heat over just pellets alone. I may try that later on.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.