I don't have much time with the stove yet so I don't have a bunch to say. I'm bored though so I figured I'd make a post.
I have to say this thing is silly or better yet super silly! It's truly amazing how long it'll burn/smolder on a load of wood in these temps. I've been building up my load sizes and tonight I loaded it pretty much to the gills I didn't get crazy filling every nook and cranny but didn't leave much room empty.(a couple small splits maybe) So far I've been loading around 9pm and having a large amount of wood left around 8am and a stove top temp around 300*. After getting home between 5-6pm the stove is around 150* with some coals left. After the initial burn in the house temps are staying nice and even, today when I left for work the hallway leading to the family room was 71* when I got home is was 70*. Of course I then proceed to cook myself out tonight since I wanted to load the stove up to see how long it'll burn on a full load, the hallway is now 78* and I'm hiding in the living room where it's cooler. :lol:
The dirty glass I'm not a fan of but I burned it pretty clean tonight by running it hot longer before shutting it down.(in stages) I also think it'll stay cleaner when it gets cold and I need to burn it hotter. I knew this going in so it's not a problem and flames are only a small turn of a knob away.
Only other thing I'm fighting is some smoke spillage. My old stove(Endeavor) never had an issue at any outdoor temperature if I opened the door during the coaling stage. I hope it gets better once the cold weather gets here. I'm also still learning the best way to load it and open the door to avoid spillage. I know the chimney is plenty tall enough(27' of liner and the Endeavor used to try to run away) but I don't have the vertical rise that BK recommends before a bend, I'm about 30" up with a 90 and they want 36". If it doesn't improve when the temps drop I may try two 45's. It could also be the BK has lower flue temps so the draft may not be as well once it hits the coaling stage or from a cold start. Once the fire is going the draft isn't an issue, I reached a 750* top temp tonight when I was burning it on 3 for 20 minutes.
So far it's living up to my expectations!

I have to say this thing is silly or better yet super silly! It's truly amazing how long it'll burn/smolder on a load of wood in these temps. I've been building up my load sizes and tonight I loaded it pretty much to the gills I didn't get crazy filling every nook and cranny but didn't leave much room empty.(a couple small splits maybe) So far I've been loading around 9pm and having a large amount of wood left around 8am and a stove top temp around 300*. After getting home between 5-6pm the stove is around 150* with some coals left. After the initial burn in the house temps are staying nice and even, today when I left for work the hallway leading to the family room was 71* when I got home is was 70*. Of course I then proceed to cook myself out tonight since I wanted to load the stove up to see how long it'll burn on a full load, the hallway is now 78* and I'm hiding in the living room where it's cooler. :lol:
The dirty glass I'm not a fan of but I burned it pretty clean tonight by running it hot longer before shutting it down.(in stages) I also think it'll stay cleaner when it gets cold and I need to burn it hotter. I knew this going in so it's not a problem and flames are only a small turn of a knob away.
Only other thing I'm fighting is some smoke spillage. My old stove(Endeavor) never had an issue at any outdoor temperature if I opened the door during the coaling stage. I hope it gets better once the cold weather gets here. I'm also still learning the best way to load it and open the door to avoid spillage. I know the chimney is plenty tall enough(27' of liner and the Endeavor used to try to run away) but I don't have the vertical rise that BK recommends before a bend, I'm about 30" up with a 90 and they want 36". If it doesn't improve when the temps drop I may try two 45's. It could also be the BK has lower flue temps so the draft may not be as well once it hits the coaling stage or from a cold start. Once the fire is going the draft isn't an issue, I reached a 750* top temp tonight when I was burning it on 3 for 20 minutes.
So far it's living up to my expectations!