Hi all
Having an "energy star" night here in connecticut outside temps at 46 right now.
There has been a lot of castile feed gate talk lately. I have always kept throttled down to the minimum feed position. This the only feed rate I have ever used, to curb consumption.
I'm wondering if I've been penny wise and dollar foolish, with this train of thought.
Do you guys adjust your feed gates? I always have an active "spikes" flame.
Thanks
Ray
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			Having an "energy star" night here in connecticut outside temps at 46 right now.
There has been a lot of castile feed gate talk lately. I have always kept throttled down to the minimum feed position. This the only feed rate I have ever used, to curb consumption.
I'm wondering if I've been penny wise and dollar foolish, with this train of thought.
Do you guys adjust your feed gates? I always have an active "spikes" flame.
Thanks
Ray
 
	 
	 
 
		 
 
		 !!
!!   It boils down to how many lbs/hr you are dumping into the burnpot which equates to btu's/hour.  If the pellets are long and/or less dense, then you get few btu's/hour and you are running lean since your airflow is the same (assuming you don't touch the heat setting).  Then you switch to a brand with very dense, small pellets and you say "Wow, these pellets are really ''''HOT'''' compared to the others.  Well, no, they aren't!  You're just feeding more btu's per hour.
  It boils down to how many lbs/hr you are dumping into the burnpot which equates to btu's/hour.  If the pellets are long and/or less dense, then you get few btu's/hour and you are running lean since your airflow is the same (assuming you don't touch the heat setting).  Then you switch to a brand with very dense, small pellets and you say "Wow, these pellets are really ''''HOT'''' compared to the others.  Well, no, they aren't!  You're just feeding more btu's per hour. 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		