Been very fortunate (well, it took planning and effort) to be burning very nicely seasoned wood this year. I also did a modified block-off install. Thanks to that combo, I'm able to reach secondary burn much faster than last season and, therefore, close down the air much quicker.
My question is, is there any reason not to do this as quickly as possible?
For example, last year it was more like an hour long process of painstakingly reducing the air control down and could never really shut it all the way. Now, on a restart for example, I immediately close to halfway when full flame occurs and then I take it down to 1/8th and kick on the fan when the stove top hits 300. This has been taking 15-20 mins in comparison and then top temp slowly but steadily climbs to 450-500 before leveling out after I close down the rest of the way. I have a load of 4-5 pieces in a modified NS/EW arrangement and I am maintaining healthy flames. Am I possibly throttling my heat output at the expense of burn time?
My take is that it's working quite well but it's so fast it makes me wonder...
My question is, is there any reason not to do this as quickly as possible?
For example, last year it was more like an hour long process of painstakingly reducing the air control down and could never really shut it all the way. Now, on a restart for example, I immediately close to halfway when full flame occurs and then I take it down to 1/8th and kick on the fan when the stove top hits 300. This has been taking 15-20 mins in comparison and then top temp slowly but steadily climbs to 450-500 before leveling out after I close down the rest of the way. I have a load of 4-5 pieces in a modified NS/EW arrangement and I am maintaining healthy flames. Am I possibly throttling my heat output at the expense of burn time?
My take is that it's working quite well but it's so fast it makes me wonder...
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