Overnight burns have been easier the dryer the wood I use. While I was fairly careful last year to ensure I was properly checking and using wood below 20%, my oak was still a bit borderline. This year, so far so good and part of the last half of last year. All due to mixing oak in with my reloads. Now I can get nice overnight burns, wake up and kick up the air control and get results that look like the picture below in the morning. (not perfect! But not bad)
About an hour later I reloaded about 1/2 - 3/4 full, and fairly soon after had a nice amount of productivity with this new load.
I let this load burn fairly hot for awhile, and was able to burn off most of what you see on the glass.
It still amazes me, when I open this dauntless and see the tiny firebox inside that it can take a large armload of wood and heat part of my home for 12+ hours.
Meanwhile, my wife wants a fire in the fireplace. That thing just CONSUMES wood and provides little to no to negative value.
One thing Im still struggling with. While the dog loves it, the stove room is ~650 sq ft fairly open with cathedral ceilings. I added a ceiling fan and now that room is HOT, while the adjoining rooms are not so much. I have a fan blowing INTO the stove room, and Ive tried the opposite but neither seems to pull the air into the colder room. Stove room might be at 78 degrees, while the adjoining room is at 69.
About an hour later I reloaded about 1/2 - 3/4 full, and fairly soon after had a nice amount of productivity with this new load.
I let this load burn fairly hot for awhile, and was able to burn off most of what you see on the glass.
It still amazes me, when I open this dauntless and see the tiny firebox inside that it can take a large armload of wood and heat part of my home for 12+ hours.
Meanwhile, my wife wants a fire in the fireplace. That thing just CONSUMES wood and provides little to no to negative value.
One thing Im still struggling with. While the dog loves it, the stove room is ~650 sq ft fairly open with cathedral ceilings. I added a ceiling fan and now that room is HOT, while the adjoining rooms are not so much. I have a fan blowing INTO the stove room, and Ive tried the opposite but neither seems to pull the air into the colder room. Stove room might be at 78 degrees, while the adjoining room is at 69.