Hello, First Post
, This week I am buying a New Buck Model 91 Cat stove (insert) I currently use an Old Buck Model 27000. Now when the Wood fuel gets low I open the top damper, crack the doors open for 2-3 seconds then open all the way and feed the new load of splits. Close the doors, pull the damper out to 4 clicks and have no more worries. What is the Technique/Requirement for a Cat stove?? I'd imagine I open the bypass, crack the door a few sec, then fully open ( Here's my blurry area ) Once I load new splits do I have to wait for it to be going good before closing the bypass? or can I load it, close the door/close the bypass and not worry any more for several hrs?? Is it like loading a Non-Cat stove or is there time I need to spend with it at each loading?? Thanks in Advance, Been Lurking/Learning and now (because of you all
) gonna bite the bullet and SAVE WOOD
Thanks Again....
, This week I am buying a New Buck Model 91 Cat stove (insert) I currently use an Old Buck Model 27000. Now when the Wood fuel gets low I open the top damper, crack the doors open for 2-3 seconds then open all the way and feed the new load of splits. Close the doors, pull the damper out to 4 clicks and have no more worries. What is the Technique/Requirement for a Cat stove?? I'd imagine I open the bypass, crack the door a few sec, then fully open ( Here's my blurry area ) Once I load new splits do I have to wait for it to be going good before closing the bypass? or can I load it, close the door/close the bypass and not worry any more for several hrs?? Is it like loading a Non-Cat stove or is there time I need to spend with it at each loading?? Thanks in Advance, Been Lurking/Learning and now (because of you all
) gonna bite the bullet and SAVE WOOD
Thanks Again....

As with any new stove, there's going to be a learning curve as you figure out how to run it most efficiently. Gotta ask, how long has your wood been split, stacked and drying, and what species do you have? You need dry wood for these newer stoves to run their best. There's a lot of good info in the manual, available online if you don't have the stove yet. I want the cat to start burning pretty soon after I close the bypass, don't want to run a lot of unburned smoke through the cat, so I get the stove up to temp before I load and close the bypass. If the cat probe is 600+, I may load on the fly and have the stove set for another 12+ hr. burn in about half an hour. If the stove is colder, I'll burn a few small splits to get the probe up to about 700 before I load. In that case, I'm looking at about 3/4-1 hr. to cruise the stove. I'll send a message to your inbox with links to a few posts that describe how I run the 91.
Sounds like you have a good shelter and several sources of wood; You should be able to get yourself set up well for next season with a bit of planning. With that kind of space to stack under, you can spread the rows out for better air movement to dry the wood. I would separate out the Oak from any loads you buy, save that for subsequent winters, and concentrate on getting the non-Oak dry for next winter. Those pallet mfgr. "chunks" sound like a gold mine of dry wood, as well. For the rest of this season, you might try some of the compressed-wood logs they sell at the farm stores. I've never used 'em but I understand they burn HOT so you have to be careful with 'em, just a few per load. Placement in the load may be important as well. I would guess that you'll be able to cut your wood usage by 2 cords, at least. Can you detail your heat needs a bit more? Sq.ft. to heat, stove centrally located, layout pretty open so heat can move through the house easily, insulation and air-sealing pretty good? My 91 has got an uphill battle at the MIL's house...stove at one end of the house, 9.5' ceilings, no wall insulation etc, but it still does pretty well. This stove will toss big heat, and instead of loading "and not worry any more for several hrs," I don't come back for 12 hrs. 