Here's how I successfully burn wood in my pellet stove.
I have an 8 year old Lopi Yankee. Local cost of pellets is $300-$350/ton, so burning wood became attractive, especially since there's a free local source of plywood scrap.
At first, I supplemented the pellet stream with wood. This worked well, releasing much more heat than pellets alone, until the cast iron plate behind the burn pot warped. I installed a new one ($90), then burned wood alone. I allowed the pellets to run out, lit the fire with gel starter and wood scrap. The augur turned, the blowers blew, and the stove put tremendous amounts of heat, much more than with pellets on max.
It's been working now for 6 weeks, no signs of warpage. I think it wapred originally because the combined heat of the pellets and wood were too much for the cast iron. I add wood every hour or so. Plywood makes far less dust than pellets. I let it cool down overnight, vacuum out the ash in the morning, and I'm good to go.
I have an 8 year old Lopi Yankee. Local cost of pellets is $300-$350/ton, so burning wood became attractive, especially since there's a free local source of plywood scrap.
At first, I supplemented the pellet stream with wood. This worked well, releasing much more heat than pellets alone, until the cast iron plate behind the burn pot warped. I installed a new one ($90), then burned wood alone. I allowed the pellets to run out, lit the fire with gel starter and wood scrap. The augur turned, the blowers blew, and the stove put tremendous amounts of heat, much more than with pellets on max.
It's been working now for 6 weeks, no signs of warpage. I think it wapred originally because the combined heat of the pellets and wood were too much for the cast iron. I add wood every hour or so. Plywood makes far less dust than pellets. I let it cool down overnight, vacuum out the ash in the morning, and I'm good to go.