I have a St. Croix Ashby pellet insert. Not sure if I have an OAK (I'm guessing no?). I live in a 2.5 story colonial house with the stove in my living room. I was under the impression that I should keep the manual damper closer to the bottom of the hill to give it less air. If I do this, the pellets pile up in the burn pot after a few hours on manual heat setting 3 to 5. If I put the damper closer to the top of the hill, I don't get any backup in the burn pot, and the stove appears to function good. I've had it on setting 3 for the past 24 hours and haven't even burned through a whole bag of crappy pellets (Timber Heat). Seems I would burn through more before for the same amount of heat. The burn pot is not backed up at all. I can still turn the damper up, which I'm sure I'd have to do if I wanted heat setting 4 or 5. Not sure what damper settings I would need to run on 1 or 2. Any idea why this is all happening?
Is it also normal for the fire to wax and wane maybe every 30 to 60 minutes? It burns a lot and normal, then maybe 30 minutes later, it goes down, then a few minutes later it's back to normal, and this repeats.
If I can keep my house at 70F with one bag a day on setting 3, I could actually save money over my natural gas furnace by using setting 1 or 2 and guessing it would keep the house at 60 to 65 which is what I keep the furnace at. It's nice to give the furnace a break on 20 degree days since it runs constantly. In a way I'm actually annoyed that NG has dropped in price because pellets haven't. $249 for a ton is the cheapest around me. I saw $199 at the end of the season last year since it was so warm and everyone had overstock. Never seen it that cheap though and I've had the stove five years. Prices traditionally have been $229 to $279 in Rochester, NY.
Is it also normal for the fire to wax and wane maybe every 30 to 60 minutes? It burns a lot and normal, then maybe 30 minutes later, it goes down, then a few minutes later it's back to normal, and this repeats.
If I can keep my house at 70F with one bag a day on setting 3, I could actually save money over my natural gas furnace by using setting 1 or 2 and guessing it would keep the house at 60 to 65 which is what I keep the furnace at. It's nice to give the furnace a break on 20 degree days since it runs constantly. In a way I'm actually annoyed that NG has dropped in price because pellets haven't. $249 for a ton is the cheapest around me. I saw $199 at the end of the season last year since it was so warm and everyone had overstock. Never seen it that cheap though and I've had the stove five years. Prices traditionally have been $229 to $279 in Rochester, NY.
Last edited: