I realize I’m a newbie on the forum but I’ve run ~200 cords of spruce and birch through my early catalytic King since the early 90s.
The above 2 species are pretty much all that’s available in most of Alaska except for the dreaded cottonwood.
Our birch is dry ~24Mbtu/cord; dry white spruce ~18Mbtu.
If you burn birch round the clock, even in a King you get rapid buildup of large chunks of carbonized wood mixed with true ash. Digging them out and discarding them is a hassle that wastes energy.
So: fill up and burn birch at night when sleeping. If you don’t need much heat during the day, just turn air control to 1. When sun goes down or you come home in afternoon and want more heat, put in enough spruce to last till bedtime and turn air inlet thermostat up to needed heat output setting.
I’ve found that burning spruce in daytime and earlier evening (before bedtime) consumes all those big chunks of carbonized, de-volatilized birch so ashes build up as slowly as possible.
And ash dig-outs are needed as infrequently as possible.
The above 2 species are pretty much all that’s available in most of Alaska except for the dreaded cottonwood.
Our birch is dry ~24Mbtu/cord; dry white spruce ~18Mbtu.
If you burn birch round the clock, even in a King you get rapid buildup of large chunks of carbonized wood mixed with true ash. Digging them out and discarding them is a hassle that wastes energy.
So: fill up and burn birch at night when sleeping. If you don’t need much heat during the day, just turn air control to 1. When sun goes down or you come home in afternoon and want more heat, put in enough spruce to last till bedtime and turn air inlet thermostat up to needed heat output setting.
I’ve found that burning spruce in daytime and earlier evening (before bedtime) consumes all those big chunks of carbonized, de-volatilized birch so ashes build up as slowly as possible.
And ash dig-outs are needed as infrequently as possible.