OK, so here's one. Like most people, I run the stove flat out for a while to get up to cat temp, hit the cat, and give it a few minutes to light off. Then I cut back the airflow to do a long burn.
The question is - cutting back the airflow reduces the flow of oxygen into the stove, reducing the rate of the burn. That's the goal. But where does the cat get additional oxygen for its combustion process? Whatever it's doing, it has to be matching O to C somehow.
Any experts out there?
Steve
The question is - cutting back the airflow reduces the flow of oxygen into the stove, reducing the rate of the burn. That's the goal. But where does the cat get additional oxygen for its combustion process? Whatever it's doing, it has to be matching O to C somehow.
Any experts out there?
Steve