I know the Cat thing has been dealt with here, so my apologies if this is redundant, but yes, I have Cat questions and doubts and concerns. Here's a brief CV on my wood burning experience as it may help people more current than I understand where I am coming from.
I am a city guy, Bklyn NY, who went to the woods. I studied rock and adobe masonry out West and learned to build Rumford Fireplaces that actually worked. Back in upper NY State I moved into a pre-Civil War farm house--10+ rooms. Wood heat only. Cut and split hardwood from my 40 acre lot. We had an old cast iron cook stove (1903 Kern, still have it) and, in keeping with the state of the art of the day, I bought 2 Ashley sheet-metal stoves with cast iron tops and bottoms and automatic air controls. They kept us all alive. Then the Arab oil embargo came down and crushed us. All the farmers wanted to convert back to wood stoves. There was work for me fixing up the old chimneys, installing new ones, and new-fangled stoves started to arrive from Scandinavia. Jotul was maybe the first. Eventually, went back to NY City. Left the cows behind (pardon the pun).
Today I have a Hearthstone Heritage soapstone stove, made in 2022. I assume it is the current model. I installed it to replace the fireplace as the clay tile was cracked and I did not fancy taking it down to the ground and rebuilding through my fully renovated house. Besides, I felt it was more proper to get the most out of the wood, and Rumford, good as he was, only went so far.
So here's my current situation. I use the stove to heat the great room, the kitchen and, as far as possible, a bedroom and a bath down a hallway. I've read here and elsewhere as well as the manual but I'm mystified by a lot of the tech and that people here seem like NASA stove engineers. I've read that some have trouble keeping their Cat stoves from overheating. Not here. Only once have I seen it even close; most of the time it runs much cooler. If the CatActive range is 0 to 100, mine runs around 10 to 30. While I am happy with the heat--it is even, soft and seldom gets too warm if a bit slow on the warm up--I wonder if it isn't running too cold. If it runs low on fuel and goes below Cat range, sometimes loading it up and waiting around for it to come back instead of going to bed is a hardship, so I am tempted to let it run without the cat. But then I worry what that might do. In the pre-Cat word there were no such worries. Finally, I wonder what all this Cat-concern is giving me. Do I actually get more heat out of my hard earned fuel with the Cat? Or does it just make Greta Thunberg happy? The thing is mounted at the top rear of the stove. It seems that whatever heat a burn at that point generates, it will mostly go up the flue and heat the world, but not my house. Finally, I seldom get to see the flames; the glass is always black. I clean it but by the end of the day it's black again. By now, in January, like last year, I just leave it stay black. Does anyone have any insights to share.
By the way, the set-up is back vented. The SS nipple on the back of the stove Tee's into the 6" SS corrugated liner that runs (almost) straight to the roof. The bottom of the Tee allows for a removable cap for a cleanout. The run from the back of the stove to the roof is 13 or 14 feet. Typically, the best way to start a fire, or to add a lot of new wood, is to prop the side door open to fan it up. The air intake control is usually not enough, and/or it will take forever to get up to speed. Draft, I guess, is a bit low at the outset, but the run speed is perfect for the space and the CT climate.
Thank you for your time and for any suggestions you may have.
I am a city guy, Bklyn NY, who went to the woods. I studied rock and adobe masonry out West and learned to build Rumford Fireplaces that actually worked. Back in upper NY State I moved into a pre-Civil War farm house--10+ rooms. Wood heat only. Cut and split hardwood from my 40 acre lot. We had an old cast iron cook stove (1903 Kern, still have it) and, in keeping with the state of the art of the day, I bought 2 Ashley sheet-metal stoves with cast iron tops and bottoms and automatic air controls. They kept us all alive. Then the Arab oil embargo came down and crushed us. All the farmers wanted to convert back to wood stoves. There was work for me fixing up the old chimneys, installing new ones, and new-fangled stoves started to arrive from Scandinavia. Jotul was maybe the first. Eventually, went back to NY City. Left the cows behind (pardon the pun).
Today I have a Hearthstone Heritage soapstone stove, made in 2022. I assume it is the current model. I installed it to replace the fireplace as the clay tile was cracked and I did not fancy taking it down to the ground and rebuilding through my fully renovated house. Besides, I felt it was more proper to get the most out of the wood, and Rumford, good as he was, only went so far.
So here's my current situation. I use the stove to heat the great room, the kitchen and, as far as possible, a bedroom and a bath down a hallway. I've read here and elsewhere as well as the manual but I'm mystified by a lot of the tech and that people here seem like NASA stove engineers. I've read that some have trouble keeping their Cat stoves from overheating. Not here. Only once have I seen it even close; most of the time it runs much cooler. If the CatActive range is 0 to 100, mine runs around 10 to 30. While I am happy with the heat--it is even, soft and seldom gets too warm if a bit slow on the warm up--I wonder if it isn't running too cold. If it runs low on fuel and goes below Cat range, sometimes loading it up and waiting around for it to come back instead of going to bed is a hardship, so I am tempted to let it run without the cat. But then I worry what that might do. In the pre-Cat word there were no such worries. Finally, I wonder what all this Cat-concern is giving me. Do I actually get more heat out of my hard earned fuel with the Cat? Or does it just make Greta Thunberg happy? The thing is mounted at the top rear of the stove. It seems that whatever heat a burn at that point generates, it will mostly go up the flue and heat the world, but not my house. Finally, I seldom get to see the flames; the glass is always black. I clean it but by the end of the day it's black again. By now, in January, like last year, I just leave it stay black. Does anyone have any insights to share.
By the way, the set-up is back vented. The SS nipple on the back of the stove Tee's into the 6" SS corrugated liner that runs (almost) straight to the roof. The bottom of the Tee allows for a removable cap for a cleanout. The run from the back of the stove to the roof is 13 or 14 feet. Typically, the best way to start a fire, or to add a lot of new wood, is to prop the side door open to fan it up. The air intake control is usually not enough, and/or it will take forever to get up to speed. Draft, I guess, is a bit low at the outset, but the run speed is perfect for the space and the CT climate.
Thank you for your time and for any suggestions you may have.